A significant number of other members of the family have also gained distinction. Sir Nicholas Hervey (d. 1532), brother of John Hervey, great-great-great-grandfather of the first Earl, was Ambassador from
Henry VIII to the
Holy Roman Emperor and took part in the famous jousts at the
Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520. His grandson
William Hervey was created
Baron Hervey in 1620. The Hon.
Thomas Hervey, second son from the second marriage of the first Earl, held the family seat in parliament. The Hon. William Hervey, third son from the second marriage of the first Earl, was a captain in the Royal Navy. The Hon.
Felton Hervey, sixth son from the second marriage of the first Earl, represented the family seat in Parliament and was the grandfather of
Felton Hervey-Bathurst, who was created a baronet in 1818 (see
Hervey-Bathurst baronets). Sir George William Hervey (1845–1915), Comptroller-General and Secretary of the National Debt from 1894 to 1910, was the son of Lord William Hervey (1805–1850), third son of the first Marquess.
The Right Reverend Lord Arthur Hervey, fourth son of the first Marquess, was
Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells between 1869 and 1894.
Lord Alfred Hervey, sixth son of the first Marquess, was a Conservative politician. His eldest son,
The Very Reverend Frederick Alfred John
Canon Hervey (1846–1910), was Chaplain-in-Ordinary to
Queen Victoria from 1886 to 1901, and Domestic Chaplain to
King Edward VII from 1878 to 1910.
Lord Augustus Hervey, second son of the second Marquess, sat as Member of Parliament for the
Western Division of Suffolk.
Lord Francis Hervey, fourth son of the second Marquess, represented the most often held local seat in
Parliament and served as First Civil Service Commissioner from 1907 to 1909. ==Baron Hervey (1703)==