Thomas Taylour, 2nd Marquess of Headfort


Thomas Taylour, 2nd Marquess of Headfort KP PC, styled Viscount Headfort from 1795 to 1800 and Earl of Bective from 1800 to 1829, was an Anglo-Irish Whig politician. He was the Member of Parliament for Meath from 1812 to 1830.
Headfort was the son of Thomas Taylour, 1st Marquess of Headfort, and his wife Mary, and succeeded his father in the marquessate in 1829. In 1831 he was created Baron Kenlis, of Kenlis in the County of Meath, in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, which entitled him to an automatic seat in the House of Lords. He was sworn of the Irish Privy Council in 1835 and served in the Whig administration of Lord Melbourne as a Lord-in-waiting from 1837 to 1841. Between 1831 and 1870 Headfort also held the post of Lord Lieutenant of Cavan. He was made a Knight of the Order of St Patrick in 1839.
Lord Headfort first married Olivia, daughter of John Andrew Stevenson, in 1822. At the time of her early death on 21 July 1834, she left her husband with nine children to mourn her passing. On 06 May 1853, he married Lady Frances Macnaghten, daughter of John Livingstone Martyn and widow of Lieutenant-Colonel James McClintock of the Bombay Army and Sir William Hay Macnaghten, British Envoy to Afghanistan who was murdered in Kabul in 1841. Headfort died in December 1870, aged 83, and was succeeded in the marquessate by his son from his first marriage, Thomas. The second Marchioness of Headfort died in 1878. Irish author Virginia Sandars was one of his daughters.