Edward Miller Mundy (1750–1822)


Edward Miller Mundy was an English Tory politician who represented the constituency of Derbyshire.
Mundy, who was educated at Eton College, was the only son of Edward Mundy and his wife Hesther Miller. His father, who was descended from the Mundys of Allestree, was High Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1731, and his mother brought the Shipley estate into the family. Both his father and mother died in 1767.
Mundy was High Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1772 and was elected Member of Parliament for Derbyshire in 1783 and held the seat for 39 years. He was appointed Colonel of the 2nd Derby Regiment of Militia, in July 1803. In 1817 he was a member of the Grand Jury in the trial of the men involved in the Pentrich Rising.
He died at his seat, Shipley Hall, aged 72.
Mundy married three times. His first wife was Frances Meynell, eldest daughter of Godfrey Meynell, and they had five sons: Edward, Godfrey Basil, George, Frederick and Henry, and one daughter, Frances, who married Lord Charles Fitzroy, second son of the late Duke of Grafton. His second wife was Georgiana Chadwick, daughter of Evelyn Chadwick, of West Leak, Nottinghamshire, the widow of Thomas Middleton, 4th Lord Middleton. They had one daughter, Georgiana Elizabeth Miller Mundy, who married Henry Pelham-Clinton, 4th Duke of Newcastle. His third wife was Catherine Coffin, the widow of Richard Barwell, with whom he had one son, Robert.