Lord Petersham, a professional soldier, was present at Fontenoy, where he was ‘slightly wounded’ and ‘most commended’.
neither he nor his father, Lord Harrington, have a single foot of land to make any settlement with. Lord Harrington’s elder brother, Mr. Charles Stanhope, who is unmarried, has a good estate but will not do anything upon this occasion to oblige his nephew, whose sole subsistence is his commission.
Malmesbury Letters, i. 39-40.
Two years later Horace Walpole wrote that
Sir William Stanhope has just given a great ball to Lady Caroline Petersham, to whom he takes extremely since his daughter married herself to Mr. [Welbore] Ellis; and as the Petershams are relations, they propose to be his heirs.
Walpole to Mann, 7 June 1748.
Because of his peculiar gait Lord Petersham was nicknamed ‘Peter Shambles’ and Walpole also refers to ‘his nose and legs twisted to every point of crossness’.
