Andrew White

English shipowner
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroEnglish shipowner
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain England
wasShipowner Politician
Work fieldBusiness Politics
Gender
Male
Birth1792
Death1856 (aged 64 years)
Family
Father:John White
Siblings:Richard White
The details

Biography

Andrew White (22 January 1792 – 3 October 1856) was a British politician.

Born in Bishopwearmouth, White followed his father in becoming a shipowner, also owning coal mines and iron and glass factories. He became a magistrate for Sunderland and County Durham, chair of the directors of the Sunderland Joint Stock Bank, chair of the Sunderland Board of Guardians, a director of the Durham and Sunderland Railway, a commissioner of the River Wear and of Sunderland Bridge. He was president of the Sunderland Mechanics' Institute, and of the town's British and Foreign School for Boys.

A supporter of the Whigs, White was elected as the first Mayor of Sunderland. He left that office to stand in the 1837 UK general election in Sunderland, winning the seat. In Parliament, he supported shorter terms between general elections, the secret ballot, extension of the electoral franchise to all ratepayers, and for a national education system on ecumenical principles. He opposed flogging in the armed forces. He stood down at the 1841 UK general election.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 18 Feb 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.