'Lancelot Blackburne' (sometimes 'Blackburn' or 'Blackbourne'), (
10 December 1658 –
23 March 1743) was an
English clergyman, who became
Archbishop of York, and — in popular belief — a
pirate.
He was described by
Horace Walpole, in his ''Memories'', as "…''Blackbourn, the jolly old Archbishop of York, who had all the manners of a man of quality, though he had been a buccaneer, and was a clergyman; but he retained nothing of his first profession, except his
seraglio.''"
Early life
He was born in
London, a younger brother of
Richard Blackburne. He attended
Westminster School, and in
1676 entered
Christ Church, Oxford. He graduated in
1680, was ordained, and traveled to the
West Indies. In January 1684 he was granted an MA by the university; at this time, he is known to have been in
Nevis. A popular story recounts that he spent these years sailing with
buccaneers, either as their
chaplain or as a pirate himself; there is little evidence either way, although an intriguing record of
1681 notes that he was paid £20 by
Charles II for "secret services".
Church career
He returned to England during 1684, marrying Catherine Talbot (the elder sister of
William Talbot) in September, and shortly thereafter took up the first of a set of church posts.
In
1691 he became
canon of
Exeter, and in
1705 Dean, succeeding
William Wake, whose patronage would later stand him in good stead, and in
1715 Archdeacon of
Cornwall. In
1716, he traveled to
Hanover as the personal chaplain to King
George I, and the next year became
Bishop of Exeter. As Bishop, he was active in the
House of Lords; among others, he supported the repeal of the
Occasional Conformity Act.
In
1724 he became
Archbishop of York, a position he held until his death. Whilst he continued to be politically active, he often neglected his spiritual duties; he appears to have carried out few confirmations, and stopped ordaining priests after ten years. Instead, he kept apartments in London — in
Downing Street — and spent much time at the royal court. Downing Street is listed as his abode on the
1739 royal charter of the
Foundling Hospital, a charity for which he was a founding governor.
His career was controversial, with rumours that he had secretly married
George I to his mistress; the ''
Dictionary of National Biography'' mentions "his reputation for carnality" and "the laxity of his moral precepts", whilst ''
Brewer's Rogues, Villains and Eccentrics'' comments that "[his] behaviour was seldom of a standard to be expected of an archbishop. He was famously ejected by
John Disney (1677-1730) the vicar of
St. Mary's Church, Nottingham after a confirmation service when he asked for his pipe,
tobacco and ale. In many respects his behaviour was seldom of a standard to be expected of a pirate." One local legend in York even claimed that his butler was
Dick Turpin!
He died on
23 March 1743; his wife had died in
1726, leaving no children. It has often been claimed that he fathered
Thomas Hayter; there is no conclusive evidence either way, and he did not himself identify Hayter as his son, but he did leave a sizable portion of his estate to Hayter.
Description by Walpole
In a 1780 letter to David Dalrymple,
Horace Walpole gave a lengthy description of Blackburne:
: ''He was perfectly a fine gentleman to the last, to eighty-four; his favourite author was Waller, whom he frequently quoted… I often dined with him, his mistress, Mrs. Conwys, sat at the head of the table, and Hayter, his natural son by another woman, and very like him, at the bottom, as chaplain: he was afterwards Bishop of London. I have heard, but do not affirm it, that Mrs. Blackbourne, before she died, complained of Mrs. Conwys being brought under the same roof. To his clergy he was, I have heard, very imperious. One story I recollect, which showed how much he was a man of this world: and which the Queen herself repeated to my father. On the King's last journey to Hanover, before Lady Yarmouth came over, the Archbishop being With her Majesty, said to her, "Madam, I have been with your minister Walpole, and he tells me that you are a wise woman, and do not mind your husband's having a mistress."''
References
★ ''The
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''
★
Horace Walpole, ''
Letters, Volume 4'' (at
Project Gutenberg)
External link
★
Contemporary image of Lancelot Blackburne at the
National Portrait Gallery.