Augustus William Lumley-Savile

Lord Scarbrough never married but engendered five natural children, four sons and one daughter.

The earl bequeathed the family estates to his second son Captain Henry Lumley (d. 1881), and on Captain Lumley's death the estates passed to Augustus William Lumley-Savile, who was the youngest of the four sons.

[2] In 1847 Augustus William Lumley-Savile matriculated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford.

Mr. Augustus Savile, so much better known to the world as Augustus Lumley, the foremost leader of cotillons and genius of the ballroom in days gone by, opened his great house at Rufford, most hospitably last week.

The sport was good for that county, and some of the guns first-rate—Lord Clarendon, for example, Lord Barrington, and Captain Green.

"Cotillon"
Caricature of
Mr. Augustus William Lumley-Savile
by Ape in Vanity Fair , 3 January 1874