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  1. Lord Aubrey Beauclerk (c. 1710 – 22 March 1741) was an officer of the Royal Navy. He saw service during the War of the Austrian Succession and was killed at the Battle of Cartagena de Indias.

  2. Lord Aubrey Beauclerk. Aubrey has a monument of white and grey marbles in the north transept of Westminster Abbey. The sculptor was Peter Scheemakers and it shows a bust within a niche and naval trophies. His coat of arms is shown. He was killed in 1740 and presumably buried at sea.

  3. Aubrey Beauclerk, 6th Duke of St Albans (21 August 1765 – 12 August 1815) was an English aristocrat and politician. [1] Early life. The 5th Duke of St Albans and his wife, Lady Catherine, son Aubrey and daughters Catherine and Caroline, by Franciszek Smuglevicz, 1778. Beauclerk was born on 21 August 1765.

  4. BEAUCLERK, Aubrey, Earl of Burford (1765-1815). Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1790-1820, ed. R. Thorne, 1986. Available from Boydell and Brewer. Constituency. Dates. KINGSTON-UPON-HULL. 1790 - 1796. Family and Education.

  5. Lord Aubrey Beauclerk, was the eighth and youngest son of Charles Beauclerk, 1st Duke of St Albans, and his wife Lady Diana de Vere, and was born about 1710. Like many younger sons of the nobility he entered the Royal Navy and served as a lieutenant on the Berwick, Portland and Monument.

  6. Aubrey Beauclerk may refer to: Lord Aubrey Beauclerk (c. 1710–1741), Royal Navy officer. Aubrey Beauclerk, 5th Duke of St Albans (1740–1802), British peer. Aubrey Beauclerk, 6th Duke of St Albans (1765–1815), British peer. Aubrey Beauclerk, 7th Duke of St Albans (1815–1816), British peer.

  7. BEAUCLERK, Lord AUBREY (1710?–1741), captain in the royal navy, was the eighth son of Charles, first duke of St. Albans. After some previous service he was made post-captain on 1 April 1731, and appointed to the Ludlow Castle, which ship he commanded on the Leeward Islands station for about eighteen months.