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John Fenwick
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Sir '''John Fenwick''' (c.
1645 -
28 January 1697) was an
England English Conspiracy (political) conspirator.
He was the eldest son of Sir
William Fenwick, or Fenwicke, a member of an old
Northumberland family. He entered the army, becoming
major-general in
1688, but before this date he had been returned in succession to his father as one of the members of parliament for Northumberland, which county he represented from 1677 to 1687. He was a strong partisan of King
James II of England James II, and in
1685 was one of the principal supporters of the
act of attainder against the
duke of Monmouth; but he remained in England when
William III of England William III ascended the throne three years later.
He began at once to plot against the new king, for which he underwent a short imprisonment in 1689. Renewing his plots on his release, he publicly insulted
Mary II of England Queen Mary in 1691, and it is practically certain that he was implicated in the schemes for assassinating William which came to light in 1695 and 1696. After the seizure of his fellow-conspirators,
Robert Charnock and others, he remained in hiding until the imprudent conduct of his friends in attempting to induce one of the witnesses against him to leave the country led to his arrest in June in
1696.
To save himself he offered to reveal all he knew about the
Jacobitism Jacobite conspiracies; but his confession was a farce, being confined to charges against some of the leading Whig noblemen, which were damaging, but not conclusive. By this time his friends had succeeded in removing one of the two witnesses, and in these circumstances it was thought that the charge of treason must fail. The government, however, overcame this difficulty by introducing a bill of attainder, which after a long and acrimonious discussion passed through both Houses of Parliament. His wife persevered in her attempts to save his life, but her efforts were fruitless, and Fenwick was beheaded in London on the 28th of January 1697, with the same formalities as were usually observed at the execution of a
peerage peer.
By his wife, Mary (d. 1708), daughter of
Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Carlisle, he had three sons and one daughter.
Macaulay says that of all the Jacobites, the most desperate characters not excepted, he (Fenwick) was the only one for whom William felt an intense personal aversion; and it is interesting to note that Fenwick's hatred of the king is said to date from the time when he was serving in Holland, and was reprimanded by William, then prince of Orange.
References
*{{1911}}
Category:English criminals Fenwick, John
Category:British Army generals Fenwick, John
Category:1645 births Fenwick, John
Category:1697 deaths Fenwick, John
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