Isabella Seymour-Conway, Countess of Hertford


Isabella Seymour-Conway, formerly Isabella Fitzroy, was the wife of Francis Seymour-Conway, 1st Marquess of Hertford.
She was the daughter of Charles FitzRoy, 2nd Duke of Grafton, and thus descended in the illegitimate line from King Charles II. Her mother was the former Lady Henrietta Somerset.
She married Seymour-Conway on 29 May 1741, when he was still Baron Conway. Their children were:
She became a countess when her husband was created an earl in 1750. In the 1760s the earl was appointed Ambassador to France and was accompanied by his wife, whose portrait was painted in Paris by Alexander Roslin. The countess was an art collector and in 1759 was introduced to William Hunter, who remained a friend. Hunter was founder of the Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery, where her portrait now hangs. From 1768 until her death, the countess was a Lady of the Bedchamber to Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, queen consort of King George III of the United Kingdom.
The earl and countess were the subject of at least two caricatures created by the political cartoonist James Gillray. One of these, "Dame rat, and her poor little ones", published in 1782, shows Isabella and her husband in the company of Charles James Fox. The other, "The Jubilee", shows the couple dancing around a gallows from which hangs a fox.
She died, aged 56, after a visit to their grandson at Forde's Farm, Thames Ditton, where she was taken ill. Horace Walpole, who was related to the earl and a correspondent of the countess, said, "Lord Hertford's loss is beyond measure. She was not only the most affectionate wife, but the most useful one, and almost the only person I ever saw that never neglected or put off or forgot anything that was to be done. She was always proper, either in the highest life or in the most domestic." It was after the countess's death that the earl was given the title Marquess of Hertford.