Lady Henrietta Scott (b. 1728–?), married Nicolas Boyce.
On 9 July 1730, Deloraine was commissioned as a colonel in the 6th Dragoon Guards, the King's Carabiners (c. 1691), and his coat of arms was recorded as follows: "ARMS. Or, on a bend Azure, a star between two crescents of the field. CREST. A stag trippant, proper. SUPPORTERS. Two maidens richly attired in antique habits, their under robe Vert, the middle one Azure, and the uppermost Gules, and each plumed on her head with feathers. MOTTO. 'Amo'."[4]
Lord Deloraine died suddenly on Christmas Day in 1730 in Leadwell (now Ledwell), Oxfordshire, and is buried at Sandford St. Martin, Oxfordshire. His second wife, who had been a royal mistress of King George II,[5] remarried, and she is buried at Windsor.[1]
Arms
Coat of arms of Henry Scott, 1st Earl of Deloraine
Or, on a bend Azure, a star between two crescents of the field.
Supporters
Two maidens richly attired in antique habits, their under robe Vert, the middle one Azure, and the uppermost Gules, and each plumed on her head with feathers.