Olivia married in 1797
Robert Bernard Sparrow, son of the Member of Parliament
Robert Sparrow (1741–1822). At
Westminster School in the late 1780s, he had bullied Robert Southey, with whom he had shared a room at Ottley's house for boarders. His mother Mary died in 1793, by which time he had inherited the estates of his uncle
Sir Robert Bernard, 5th Baronet, including Brampton Park, Tandragee Castle in Armagh, and the manors of Leigh-on-Sea and
Hadleigh, Essex. He was an army officer, in 1794 a major in the
70th Foot. Violence by Sparrow is the subject of a number of accounts. Réamonn Ó Muirí comments that "It is not easy to clarify the incident of Sparrow's killing of Captain Lucas." Sparrow was tried and convicted for murder by the Armagh assizes. In an account in the
Anti-Jacobin in 1810, he produced a pardon and was released. The commentary associates the incident with an attempt to arrest
James Coigly. The victim is identified as Captain William Lucas (died August 1797, of wounds "incurred in a duel" with Colonel Robert Sparrow of
Tandragee), fifth son of
Edward Lucas of
Castle Shane, Member of the Irish Parliament for
County Monaghan. Some later garbling of the incident is attributed to the version in
Francis Plowden's 1803
Historical Review of the State of Ireland. There is an account of Sparrow interrupting Birch's
wake with an armed force, and violently detaining a group of mourners; it is in
A View of the Present State of Ireland, a pamphlet of 1797 by "An Observer". Ó Muirí takes the view that the author was James Coigly;
Richard Robert Madden attributed it to an unnamed magistrate in northern Ireland, and
Henry Cleary to
Arthur O'Connor. Sparrow was an officer of the
111th Regiment of Foot; and in 1804, ranked Colonel, was appointed brevet Brigadier-General serving under
Sir William Myers, 1st Baronet in the West Indies. He died on 29 August 1805. He was buried at Johnson's Ghut Cemetery in
Tortola. A monument to him by
Francis Chantrey was placed in
Worlingham Church, Suffolk. There was also a tablet placed in Brampton church, with information (not all consistent with the other monument): that he had died of fever on a ship returning to England from
Barbados, and was buried on Tortola. Their son, Robert Acheson Bernard St. John Sparrow, died at
Nice on 3 March 1818, at the age of 19.
Death of Millicent and aftermath Millicent died in 1848, and litigation ensued between Lady Olivia and George Montagu, 6th Duke of Manchester. Lady Olivia went to
Alexander Haldane for legal advice, and in 1849 retained him as auditor for her estates. With the bulk from Huntingdonshire, her annual rental income came to around £11,000. The litigation did not go well, and Haldane left the auditor position after around eight years. ==Notes==