of a woman, traditionally identified as Margaret Stuart, Lady Hippisley (1785) Hippisley's first wife Margaret died on 24 September 1799 in
Brompton, London. In 1800 he served as
High Sheriff of Berkshire, where he owned
Warfield Grove, a red-brick Georgian mansion which he had bought from Admiral
Sir George Bowyer. Hippisley sold the house to the
Earl of Mountnorris in the early 19th century. In February 1801 he married his second wife, Elizabeth Anne Coxe (née Horner), the widow of
Henry Hippisley Coxe (1748–1795) of
Ston Easton Park, Somerset,
MP for
Somerset (1792–5). Despite the similarity of their names, John was not closely related to the Hippisleys of Ston Easton, if at all. He may have changed the spelling of his name around this time to further legitimise his position at Ston Easton. Hippisley was a Fellow of the
Royal Society, a vice-president and supporter of the Literary Fund Society, a benefactor of
Downside Abbey, one of the principal promoters of the literary institutions of Bath and Bristol, a member of the government committee of the
Turkey Company, vice-president of the West of England Agricultural Society and a member of the Society of Antiquaries. He was however not a popular man with all his contemporaries. The
Rev. John Skinner referred to him as 'that great orator' and a 'great ass' in his diary, published as
The Journal of a Somerset Rector, while in 1810 the wit and politician Joseph Jekyll described how during a speech by Hippisley in parliament 'the house coughed him down five times in vain, and the catarrh lasted two hours'. Hippisley had no children with Elizabeth. He retired from political life in 1818 and died on 3 May 1825 in Grosvenor Street, London. He was buried in the Inner Temple vault on 12 May 1825. His monument was sculpted by
William Grinsell Nicholl. His library was sold at auction in London by Stewart, Wheatley & Adlard on 1 March 1825 (and five following days), though the catalogue did not carry his name, referring to 'a portion of the library of a well known political character'. A copy of the sale catalogue is held at Cambridge University Library (shelfmark Munby.c.151(9)). His widow Elizabeth died on 25 March 1843 in
Grosvenor Square, London, whereupon the Ston Easton estate was inherited by her grandnephew, John Hippisley. Sir John was succeeded as baronet by John Stuart Hippisley, his son by his first wife, but he died unmarried in
Mells, Somerset on 20 March 1867, whereupon the baronetcy became extinct. ==References==