On his return from Ottoman territory in June 1668, King
Charles II remarked to Finch, "My Lord, you have not only built a town, but peopled it too". Winchilsea, in an obvious reference to Charles' own brood of natural children, replied that after all, he was the King's representative. Lord Finch was appointed by his friend
George Monck, 1st Duke of Albemarle a Governor of
Dover Castle, and Lord Warden of the
Cinque Ports in July 1660. He was also Lord Lieutenant of Kent and afterwards ambassador to the
Ottoman Empire, and served in this capacity between 1668 and 1672.
Samuel Pepys first referred to him as the Lord Winchilsea. King Charles II had landed at Kent on his way to London to secure the throne on 25 May 1660. The King arrived in Dover with 20 ships and
frigates, the Lord General and his lifeguard were accompanied by the Earl of Winchelsea to the cheer of the crowding locals gathered upon the beach to witness a salute fired from the guns of
Dover Castle. The King created him
Baron FitzHerbert, of Eastwell in the County of Kent, on 26 June 1660. ==Personal life==