Cradock’s father was the only son of Dr. John Cradock (1708-78), a Staffordshire man who went to Ireland as chaplain to the 4th duke of Bedford during his viceroyalty. He was made bishop of Kilmore in 1757 and promoted to the archbishopric of Dublin in 1772. John Francis Cradock entered the army in 1777, attained the rank of lieutenant-colonel in 1789 and served at Martinique in 1793. He was one of the Prince of Wales’s social set, but it was as a steady supporter of government that he sat in the Irish Parliament, 1785-97 and 1799-1800.
His only child John Hobart Cradock showed great linguistic ability at Eton. He obtained a commission in the Guards in 1815 and Wellington, as an act of atonement towards his father, made him one of his aides on the staff of the army of occupation. He served on the staff at Lisbon in 1818 and at Malta in 1820. His military career stagnated and he travelled in the Levant. In 1824 he entered the diplomatic service as an attaché at the Berlin embassy, and the following year he transferred to Paris.
He is one of the vainest, falsest, cleverest deceivers about the beau monde and delights in playing with the feelings of every woman he can make to like him and as he is wonderfully well informed, naturally clever and extremely agreeable, besides being very handsome, his task is not difficult.
Fox was subsequently disarmed by Cradock, who was ‘so civil and so obliging that he wins even his foes’.
He was, however, subsequently without employment and in May 1829 he asked to be reattached to the Paris embassy. The new ambassador, Lord Stuart de Rothesay, though claiming to be ‘perfectly well disposed’ towards him, could not accommodate him on the official strength. The foreign secretary, Lord Aberdeen, admitting ‘the hardship of your case and the justice of your claim’, offered him the post of paid attaché at Berlin and promised, if this was unacceptable (which it was) to try to ‘make such an arrangement as may attach you to the Paris embassy, without increasing the current number’. Cradock’s mother subsequently put in a word for him with Wellington, claiming that he had been ‘ill used by the foreign office’; and at the end of the year he was attached to the embassy as a military commissioner.
At the general election that summer he was returned in absentia for Dundalk by the 3rd earl of Roden. Ministers listed him among their ‘friends’, but he was absent from the division on the civil list which brought them down, 15 Nov. 1830. He presented but dissented from a petition for the abolition of slavery, 19 Dec., and pledged his support for Robert Grant’s proposed Jewish emancipation bill, 15 Dec. He sat on the Rye election committee, which on 18 Dec. reversed a decision of the previous Parliament in favour of an extended ratepayers’ franchise. Cradock disagreed with this determination, and on 21 Dec. 1830 he presented and supported the inhabitants’ petition calling for the patron of Rye to be punished for alleged breach of privilege in disregarding the earlier ruling at the general election. The Speaker’s technical objections forced him to withdraw it. In the recess Cradock returned to Paris, where he was kept on at the embassy under the new ambassador Lord Granville. When he went to London to attend Parliament in February 1831 Granville told Holland that he ‘will be a loss to me, he is very ready, quick and willing’.
Cradock’s ‘one great object’ in the summer of 1831, when he took the waters at Barèges, was the secretaryship of the Paris embassy, but he was disappointed in this.
In August 1837 Lady Granville described his arrival in Paris, ‘looking wretchedly and old but very domestic as he drives in the Champs Elysées with the Princess Bagration and his daughter, a fine well-grown girl of sixteen, mother unknown’.
My partners in the colliery, merchants, had contracted debts on its account to a Newcastle bank for £98,000. The bank required the money to save itself from breaking and, as I was the only solvent person in the firm, the whole weight of this immense sum, in bills at three months date, fell on me. To satisfy the claims my banker ... had to sell out every farthing I had in the funds, and to mortgage all my landed property for six years. You see that now an appointment of minister is not a matter of fancy but one of downright necessity to enable me to exist. I trust to Palmerston’s charity to do this, and, certainly, of all in his gift the one for which I am most fitted is the mission at Madrid.
Add. 43124, f. 301; Brougham mss, Howden to Brougham, 19 July 1848.
He was appointed to that embassy in 1850, having sold Grimston and his Irish property to meet his liabilities. He served ably there until he was recalled and retired with ‘brutality’, as he put it, by the Derby ministry in 1858.
Three years later he took up permanent residence in France at Casa Caradoc, the château which he had purchased at Bayonne, Basses-Pyrenées. He died there, after a long and painful illness, in October 1873.
