Oughton’s family settled at Fillongley, near Coventry, soon after the Restoration. He served under Marlborough at Blenheim, Oudenarde and Menin,
Oughton was again returned for Coventry in 1722, after a violent contest, leading to a duel in which he was wounded by Lord Craven, brother of Fulwar Craven, his Tory opponent. He was at this time said to be one of the chief advisers of General Cadogan, who had succeeded Marlborough as head of the army.
This unexpected incident is very likely to lose me my Minorcan government, which by the way is near £2,000 p.a. and which I believe by this time I had been in possession of, had not this cursed excise affair intervened and made the usual court artifices be put upon me of keeping it open in terrorem. However, whilst I lay well intrenched behind the instructions of my constituents and kept myself in a state of neutrality I was pretty sure, by the assistance of my friends to have weathered the point; but this behaviour of my worthy coadjutor having beat me out of that fastness, that behaviour which before was in my behalf softened with the terms of prudence and circumspection, is now deemed the result of obstinacy and perverseness.
And on 3 Apr.
on m’a mis le marché en mains, and if I do not vote for the wine bill at least ... I must renounce all hopes and thoughts of any present or future recompense for all my life spent in the service, a hard lesson this.
Hopkins mss.
He did not get the post, though he voted with the Government on the repeal of the Septennial Act in 1734. Re-elected in 1734 he died 4 Sept. 1736, leaving an illegitimate son, James Adolphus Dickenson Oughton who became a General in the, army.
