Sir James Long, 5th Baronet (1682 – 16 March 1729) was an
English landowner and Tory politician who sat in the
English and
British House of Commons between 1695 and 1729.
The son of James Long and his wife Susan Strangways, he was born at
Athelhampton and baptised at
Melbury House,
Dorchester, Dorset in 1682.
[1] He was the grandson of
Sir James Long, 2nd Baronet and brother of the celebrated
Kit-Cat Club beauty
Anne Long (c. 1681 – 1711). He succeeded to the
baronetcy on the death of his brother
Sir Giles Long, 4th Baronet, in 1698.
[1] He married Henrietta Greville on 6 June 1702 at
St Martin in the Fields,
Westminster,
London. She was the daughter of Fulke Greville, 5th
Baron Brooke and his wife Sarah Dashwood, and a descendant of the
Earl of Bedford. On the death of his grandmother Lady Dorothy Long in 1710, he inherited the
Draycot Estate together with
Athelhampton Manor, other land in
Wiltshire and
Dorset, and an estate near
Ripon in
Yorkshire. He used the inheritance to purchase more land in Dorset, adjacent to Athelhampton, in the manors of
Burleston and
Southover.
Long was returned as
Member of Parliament for
Chippenham at the
1705 English general election and again in
1708 and
1710.
[2] At the
1715 British general election, he was returned as MP for
Wootton Bassett. He did not stand at the
1722 British general election but was returned as MP for
Wiltshire in
1727.
[3]Long died at his London residence in
Jermyn Street on 16 March 1729 from
apoplexy. There were four daughters and two sons from his marriage. Four of his six children survived him, including
Robert who succeeded to the baronetcy. His daughter Susanna created a scandal by marrying her mother's gardener in 1732, as noted in his diary by
Viscount Perceval, (related distantly by marriage to the Longs). Lady Henrietta Long died 19 May 1765 at
Bath.