Sir Henry Tichborne, 7th Baronet

[2] In 1803 Sir Henry Tichborne was captured by the French in Verdun during the Napoleonic Wars and detained as a civil prisoner for some years.

[2][3] With him in captivity were his fourth son, James Tichborne, and Henry Seymour of Knoyle, an English nobleman.

Seymour had an affair with Felicity Dailly-Brimont, reputedly the illegitimate daughter of the Duc de Bourbon and his mistress Marie Claude Gaucher-Dailly which resulted in a daughter, Henriette Felicité (c1807–1868).

[8] Their sons included:[9] Built by his father the 6th Baronet in 1760, in 1789 Tichborne sold the family estate of Frimley Manor to James Lawrell the elder for £20,000.

He is buried with his family in St Andrew's Church in Tichborne in Hampshire.

Sir Henry Tichborne