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Thomas Higgons (Jacobite) facts for kids

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Sir Thomas Higgons (born 1668, died 1733) was an English man who supported the Jacobite cause. Jacobites were people who believed that King James II and his family should be the rulers of Britain, even after he was removed from the throne. From 1713 to 1715, Sir Thomas Higgons held an important job as the Jacobite Secretary of State in Paris. He was chosen by James Stuart, who the Jacobites believed was the rightful king, to take over from the Earl of Middleton.

Early Life and Family

Thomas Higgons was the second son of Thomas Higgons, who was a politician and a diplomat. His mother was Bridget. Through his mother, he was the grandson of Sir Bevil Grenville, a famous royalist commander. A royalist was someone who supported the king during the English Civil War. Thomas also had a younger brother named Bevil Higgons, who became a writer. His uncle was Denis Grenville. The Higgons family strongly supported King James II.

Living in Exile

After the Glorious Revolution, which removed King James II from power, Thomas Higgons went to live in France. This was a common choice for Jacobite supporters. In 1692, he and his two brothers secretly returned to England. They planned to join a Jacobite uprising that was supposed to happen when France invaded Britain. However, these plans failed when the French navy was defeated at the Battle of La Hogue.

Sir Thomas Higgons then worked as a courtier at the Jacobite court in Saint-Germain, France. A courtier is someone who attends a royal court. From 1701 onwards, he had a special role as a Gentleman Usher of the Privy Chamber for James III. This was the title Jacobites gave to James Stuart, the son of James II.

A Special Job: Secretary of State

The Earl of Middleton had been the Jacobite Secretary of State for twenty years. When he decided to step down, the Jacobites wanted to choose a Protestant person for the job. This was to show that James Stuart was tolerant, even though he was Catholic. Sir Thomas Higgons came from a Church of England background, which is Protestant.

Some people believed that Sir Thomas Higgons was mostly a figurehead in this role. This means he held the title, but the real power was used by James Stuart's half-brother, the Duke of Berwick. After Higgons, a more well-known person named Henry St John took over the job. Henry St John then oversaw the Jacobite Rising of 1715, which was a major attempt to restore James Stuart to the throne.

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