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2ND BARON FERDINANDO FAIRFAX FAIRFAX ...

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Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 131 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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2ND

BARON FERDINANDO FAIRFAX FAIRFAX OF CAMERON (1584-1648)  ,
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English
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parliamentary general, was a son of Thomas Fairfax of
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Denton (156o-1640), who in 1627 was created Baron Fairfax of Cameron in the peerage of Scotland . Born on the 29th of March 1584, he obtained his military
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education in the
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Netherlands, and was member of parliament for
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Boroughbridge during the six parliaments which met between 1614 and 1629 and also during the Short Parliament of 1640 . In May 164o he succeeded his
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father as Baron Fairfax, but being a Scottish peer he sat in the English House of
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Commons as one of the representatives of
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Yorkshire during the Long Parliament from 1649 until his
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death; he took the side of the parliament, but held moderate views and desired to maintain the peace . In the first Scottish war Fairfax had commanded a regiment in the king's army; then on the outbreak of the
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Civil War in 1642 he was made
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commander of the parliamentary forces in York-
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shire, with Newcastle as his opponent . Hostilities began after the repudiation of a treaty of
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neutrality entered into by Fairfax with the Royalists . At first he met with no success . He was driven from York, where he was besieging the Royalists, to Selby; then in 1643 to Leeds; and after beating off an attack at that place he was totally defeated on the 3oth of
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June at Adwalton
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Moor . He escaped to Hall, which he successfully defended against Newcastle from the 2nd of September till the 11th of
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October, and by means of a brilliant sally caused the siege to be raised . Fairfax was victorious at Selby on the 11th of
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April 1644, and joining the Scots besieged York, after which he was
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present at Marston Moor, where he commanded the
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infantry and was routed . He was subsequently, in
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July, made governor of York and charged with the further reduction of the county . In December he took the
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town of Pontefract, but failed to secure the castle . He resigned his command on the passing of the Self-denying Ordinance, but remained a member of the committee for the government of Yorkshire, and was appointed, on the 24th of July 1645, steward of the
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manor of Pontefract .

He died from an

accident on the 14th of March 1648 and was buried at Bolton Percy . He was twice married, and by his first wife, Mary, daughter of Edmund Sheffield, 3rd Lord Sheffield (afterwards 1st
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earl of Mulgrave), he had six daughters and two sons, Thomas, who succeeded him as 3rd baron, and Charles, a colonel of horse, who was killed at Marston Moor . During his command in Yorkshire, Fairfax engaged in a paper war with Newcastle, and wrote The Answer of Ferdinando, Lord Fairfax, to a Declaration of William, earl of Newcastle (1642; printed in Rushworth, pt. iii. vol. ii. p . 139); he also published A Letter from . . . Lord Fairfax to . . . Robert, Earl of Essex (1643), describing the victorious sally at Hull .

End of Article: 2ND BARON FERDINANDO FAIRFAX FAIRFAX OF CAMERON (1584-1648)
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