On 2 Sept. 1764 Lord Chancellor Northington, lately appointed lord lieutenant of Hampshire, wrote to George Grenville:
Having ... in pursuance of my new department prepared a candidate to succeed Mr. Legge, it is proper to inform you of the particulars. He is Sir Richard Mill, a very worthy and respectable person in this county, possessed of a very noble property, of an ancient Whig family, and professeth great attachment to the King’s person, family, measures and government. You have heard me mention this gentleman with an apprehension that he would not be prevailed on to offer his service. I must desire you to signify to the friends of government in this county ... its approbation and desired support of this gentleman ... For though I am not apprehensive of any opposition, yet I think it for the interest of government that this gentleman and my first essay should be cordially adopted.
Grenville in reply congratulated Northington on having ‘fixed upon a gentleman so highly proper and unexceptionable in all respects’, and gave him the desired support.
But Hans Stanley, who would have liked to supply that vacancy himself, wrote to Hans Sloane from Paris, 2 Oct. 1764:
Mill died 17 Mar. 1770.
