At his death on 9 Feb. 1704 the 2nd earl of Burlington, left behind him four daughters and just one son, Richard, aged ten. The new earl of Burlington did not come of age until 25 Apr. 1715 and his initial interest in politics is indicated by the fact that he first sat in the House the day after he reached his majority. Indeed he returned from his Grand Tour on the continent specifically to take his place among his peers. At that time he also took over many of the Boyles’ quasi-hereditary local roles – lord treasurer of Ireland, governor of county Cork, lord lieutenant and vice-admiral of Yorkshire – which until that time had been exercised in trust during his minority by his uncle the court Whig Henry Boyle* [615], from October 1714 Baron Carleton.
In October 1713 it was reported to Robert Harley, earl of Oxford, that both Richard Lowther, 2nd Viscount Lonsdale (an intended husband for Burlington’s sister before his death later that year), and Burlington, the latter described as ‘a good-natured, pretty gentleman’, were in the ‘ill hands’ of the Whigs.
