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Frederick William Henry Francis Conyngham, 7th Marquess Conyngham (13 March 1924 – 3 March 2009), known among friends and family as "Mount", was an Anglo-Irish nobleman, landowner and soldier, who was styled Earl of Mount Charles until 1974.
The elder son of Frederick Conyngham, 6th Marquess Conyngham, Conyngham was educated at Eton College, an all-boys independent boarding school. On 5 June 1943, he was commissioned in the Irish Guards as a second lieutenant.[1] He served with distinction during Second World War in Africa and Europe (mentioned in despatches). He left the British Army in 1945 with the rank of Captain.
Descended from a prominent aristocratic landowning family of Counties Meath and Donegal, Conyngham built a reputation as a conservationist. A talented sportsman, golf and angling were among his favourite pursuits.[citation needed]
On the death of his father in 1974 he succeeded to the family titles. Although most of his titles were in the Peerage of Ireland, he became eligible to sit in the British House of Lords by virtue of his subsidiary title Baron Minster, in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.[2] Despite this, he never took his seat, and with the passage of the House of Lords Act 1999 lost his right.[3][4]
In 1976, he left Ireland to live in the Isle of Man, although he continued to visit his son at Slane Castle. He fell ill with cancer in late 2008 and died six months later on a visit to Johannesburg in March 2009 aged 84.
Conyngham's burial service on 10 March 2009 was held at St Paul's Church, Ramsey, Isle of Man was led by Bishop Robert Paterson.
On 29 April 1950, Conyngham married Eileen Wren Newsam, by whom he had three sons before divorcing in 1970:
His second marriage, in 1971, to Elizabeth Rudd (née Hughes) was also dissolved. His third wife, Daphne Walker (née Armour), whom he married in 1980, died in 1986: a son from her first marriage is General Sir Roland Walker. He married fourthly, in 1987, Annabelle (née Agnew), now styled The Dowager Marchioness Conyngham, who was appointed a Dame of Justice of the Order of St John (DStJ) in 2010.[6]
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