Charles had succeeded in 1785 to the vast bulk of the parish of Lowick, including the grand 13th-century-core
Drayton House, replete with three towering eagles on top of its bulky gate posts. Drayton had come into the family from
Sir John Germain, 1st Baronet, who died without issue in 1718, leaving it to his wife
Lady Elizabeth Germain. On her death in 1769 Charles' father, Lord
George Sackville (later created 1st Viscount Sackville), inherited the estate. He took her surname by Act of Parliament of 1770 and was seised of the additional manor of Lowick and right to nominate the parish priest (
advowson) at the
inclosure of the parish in 1771, when about were wholly privatized to him. Charles was also dealing with five Northamptonshire manors by recovery in 1788 and 1791. He or his predecessor in the dukedom had in addition bought more modest nearby Pyels ( Vaux) manor,
Woodford, Northamptonshire between 1800 and 1843. On his death in 1843, all the estates passed to his niece Mrs. Caroline Harriet Stopford Sackville (née Sackville) (died 1908) and had descended by 1930 into the hands of Nigel Victor Stopford Sackville, the only surviving son of her second son. ==References==