Martin Raymond Peake, 2nd Viscount Ingleby (31 May 1926 – 14 October 2008) was a British hereditary peer and businessman.
Ingleby was the only son of Osbert Peake, created Viscount Ingleby in 1956, and his wife Lady Joan Capell, daughter of George Capell, 7th Earl of Essex.
He was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Oxford. Prior to his disability he was a lieutenant in the Coldstream Guards from 1945 to 1947. He was rendered a paraplegic early in life due to polio.
In 1955, he was called to the bar at the Inner Temple. He succeeded to the viscountcy upon his father's death in 1966 and became a member of the House of Lords until the enactment of the House of Lords Act 1999.
A director of the Hargreaves Group from 1960 to 1980, Ingleby was also interested in forestry and conservation. He was a member of the planning committee for the North York Moors National Park, and was responsible for the planting of a row of lime trees at the entrance to the park, which he intended as a thanksgiving for God's deliverance of Britain during the two World Wars. He also served on the North Yorkshire County Council during the 1960s.
Ingleby and Baroness Masham, who also used a wheelchair, took a prominent part in the House of Lords in the debate on the Disabled Persons Act 1970.
Ingleby married Gladys Susan Landale (died 1996) in 1952, with whom he had five children:[1]
In 1975, Ingleby suffered a personal tragedy when his only son, Richard, fell from Beachy Head and was killed. The coroner's inquest recorded an open verdict.
After the death of his first wife in 1996, Ingleby married Dobrila Radovic in 2003. They had no children.
Lord Ingleby died in 2008 at the age of 82. As his only son predeceased him, and as there were no other surviving male line heirs of the 1st Viscount, the viscountcy became extinct on his death.
Crest: | A Heart Gules between two Wings displayed Erminois |
Coronet: | Coronet of a viscount |
Escutcheon: | Sable three Crosses patée Argent within an Orle of eight Fleur-de-lys and a Bordure Or |
Supporters: | On either side a Blackfaced Swaledale Ram proper holding in the mouth a Rose Argent barbed seeded slipped and leaved also proper |
Motto: | Quae Supra Quaerenda (What is on high is worth seeking)[2] |