Sir James Weir Hogg, 1st BaronetPC (7 September 1790 – 27 May 1876), was an Irish-born businessman, lawyer and politician and Chairman of the East India Company.
Early life
Hogg was born in Lisburn, County Antrim, Ireland, on 7 September 1790. He was the eldest son of William Hogg and Mary (née Dickey) Hogg. Among his siblings were Clara Hogg, who married Dr. Alexander Jaffrey Nicholson; Rosina Hogg, who married Dr. William Thompson; Charles Hogg; and Lily Anne Maria Hogg, who married Augustus Charles Floyer and James Robert Campbell.[1]
A descendant of Protestant Scottish settlers who had immigrated to Ireland as part of the Ulster Plantation,[2] his paternal grandparents were Edward Hogg and Rose (née O'Neill) Hogg (the daughter of Rev. John O'Neill).[3] His maternal grandfather was James Dickey of Dunmore, County Antrim.[1]
He was called to the Bar and proceeded to India in 1814, where he obtained a large and lucrative practice. In 1822 he accepted the appointment of Registrar of the Supreme Court of Judicature, Calcutta, which he held until his return to England in 1833. In 1839 he was elected a Director of the East India Company.[1]
He was elected MP for Beverley in 1834, and represented Honiton from 1847 to 1857, which seat he lost by two votes at the general election that year. He was the founder of a political dynasty which is still represented by his descendent, Viscount Hailsham.[1]
Hogg was twice Chairman of the East India Company, and in 1858 when the government of India was transferred to The Crown he was elected member of the Council of India, until his resignation in 1872, aged eighty two.[4]
He was created a Baronet, of Upper Grosvenor Street in the County of London, in 1846, and was offered the posts of Judge Advocate General and the Governorship of Bombay, both of which he refused.[citation needed]
Hogg had made himself extremely wealthy. In 1846, he took a 65 year lease on 16/17 Grosvenor Square and had major changes made, including moving the staircase and adding a stone portico.[5] However in 1854, Hogg sold the lease and the contents of the Grosvenor Square house and, in 1856, moved to No 4 Carlton Gardens in Mayfair.[4]
Personal life
On 26 July 1822, Hogg married Mary Claudine Swinton, the daughter of and Isabella (née Routledge) Swinton and Samuel Swinton of Swinton House, Swinton, Berwickshire. Together, Sir James and Lady Hogg had fourteen children, many of whom married into the nobility, including:[1]
Fergusson Floyer Hogg (1829–1862) of the Bengal Civil Service; he married Elizabeth Helen Parsons, daughter of Hon. Laurence Parsons (son of the 2nd Earl of Rosse) and Lady Elizabeth Graham-Toler (daughter of the 2nd Earl of Norbury), in 1861.[12]
Annie Claudina Hogg (1831–1921), who never married.[13]
Sir Frederick Russell Hogg (1836–1923), who married Emily Eckford, daughter of Lt.-Gen. James Eckford, in 1857. They divorced in 1873 and he married Harriett Venn Dicken, daughter of William Stephens Dicken, in 1885. Harriett's sister Catherine married Henry Browne, 5th Marquess of Sligo.[8]
Amy Hogg (c. 1838–1871), who married James William MacNabb, son of James Munro MacNabb of Highfield House, Heckfield, and Jane Mary Campbell, in 1860.[16][17]
Stapleton Cotton Hogg (1839–1918), the Assistant Finance Secretary, India Office;[18] he died unmarried.[8]
Quintin Hogg (1845–1903), a merchant who married Alice Anna Graham, daughter of William Graham and Jane Catherine Lowndes, in 1871.[20]
Sir James died in 1876, aged 85.[21] On his death in 1876, he was succeeded in the baronetcy by his son James Hogg, who, on 5 July 1887, was created Baron Magheramorne, of Magheramorne in the County of Antrim, in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, as part of the celebrations for the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria. Hogg's title passed around several branches of his descendants but was ultimately inherited by the branch of his second son, Charles Swinton Hogg, whose son Ernest Charles Hogg married a member of the Peel family and he was the father to Sir Arthur Ramsay Hogg, 7th Baronet.[1]
^L. G. Pine, The New Extinct Peerage 1884-1971: Containing Extinct, Abeyant, Dormant and Suspended Peerages With Genealogies and Arms (London, U.K.: Heraldry Today, 1972), page 188.
^ abof), Melville Amadeus Henry Douglas Heddle de La Caillemotte de Massue de Ruvigny Ruvigny and Raineval (9th marquis; Raineval, Melville Henry Massue marquis de Ruvigny et (1910). The Nobilities of Europe. Melville and Company. p. 450. Retrieved 6 February 2025.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^Obituary, The Times, 29 May 1876; p. 12; Issue 28641; col E. "The Late Sir James Hogg".