George William Frederick Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon (1800-1870), Declined a Marquessate. “after the congress of Paris, pleading insufficient means to support the dignity” (ODNB).
Henry Addington, later 1st Viscount Sidmouth (1757-1844). Declined Earldom of Banbury. “Addington had no wish to return to office; but he was equally embarrassed by George III’s offer on 9 May 1804 of the earldom of Banbury and a pension of £4,000 for his wife. He declined these and other offers. ‘Why is Mr Addington too proud to accept a proof of friendship from the King?’ wrote the monarch to ‘the best friend he has in the world’. All that Addington, who shunned such a label, would agree to accept was the tenancy of White Lodge and the gift of a copy of the royal portrait. There were reports of the King’s willingness to admit his best friend’s want of calibre as minister, but George III’s continued cordiality to Addington was noted with apprehension by Pitt’s friends and the King certainly set himself the task of reconciling Addington and Pitt—their estrangement was undoubtedly the greatest private loss Addington had incurred in obeying the royal command in 1801” (History of Parliament Online).
Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill (1874-1965). Declined a Dukedom (sometime said to be Dukedom of London). “On 5 April 1955, after entertaining the queen and the duke of Edinburgh to dinner at 10 Downing Street, he tendered his resignation. The queen offered him a dukedom but Churchill remained an MP until 1964, sometimes voting in parliamentary divisions, but never again speaking in the house… After stepping down as prime minister Churchill refused the offer of a dukedom, though he was tempted for a while by the prospect of becoming duke of London” (ODNB)”.
Benjamin Disraeli, later 1st Earl of Beaconsfield (1804-1881). Declined a Marquessate and Dukedom. “The queen offered him a marquessate or dukedom, which he refused; he and Salisbury accepted the KG” (ODNB).
Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne (1780-1863). Declined a Dukedom. “However, his experience and reputation for fair-mindedness enabled him, in the years after Wellington's death, to fill the duke's role as leading constitutional adviser to the crown. In September 1857 Palmerston conveyed the queen's offer of a dukedom, and it was widely regretted that modesty and an unwillingness to exchange 'that name which has now been mine for so many years, & with which my publick character such as it is has become identified' (BL, Bowood MSS, Lans. 3/42/72) led him to decline the honour” (ODNB).
Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (1830-1903). Declined a Dukedom. See Queen Victoria: A Biographical Companion (2003), 330; “Dukedom for Salisbury Expected”, The New York Times, 3 Sept 1901; “It is true that the Marquis of Salisbury might have been a Duke if he had not regarded his marquisate as a prouder title than a new dukedom could furnish” (“The Point of View: American Style”, Scribner’s Magazine, xxviii, no 124 (1910).
Prince Louis of Battenberg, later 1st Marquess of Milford Haven (1854-1921). Declined a Dukedom. Since he could not afford the lavish lifestyle expected (Daughters of Empire (1st edn, 2013), 4).
Maria Fitzherbert, mistress and later cancelled wife of the future George IV (1756-1837). Declined a Dukedom. See George IV (2001), 39 by E. A. Smith.
John Poyntz Spencer, 5th Earl Spencer (1835-1910). Declined a Marquessate. “On leaving office Spencer was offered a marquessate by Gladstone, but after consulting Granville and Hartington refused it. He was now free to pursue his hobbies, rifle shooting and fox-hunting” (ODNB).
Alexander Augustus Frederick William Alfred George Cambridge, later 1st Earl of Athlone (1874-1957). Declined a Marquessate. Reportedly on account of it not sounding British-enough.
Henry Ulick Lascelles, 5th Earl of Harewood (1846-1929). Declined a Marquessate. Reportedly in the belief they tended to become extinct quicker.
S.S.
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