Charles George Tottenham
Quick Facts
Biography
Lieutenant Colonel Charles George Tottenham (1835 – 23 Apr 1918) from County Wexford was an Irish officer in the British Army and a Conservative politician.
Tottenham was the son of Charles Tottenham (1807–1886) from Ballycurry and New Ross in County Wexford. His family were wealthy land owners in County Wexford. He was educated at Eton, and married his cousin, who was a daughter of Reverend Sir Francis Stapleton, 7th Baronet, of Henley-on-Thames.
He was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Scots Fusilier Guards, and served in the Crimean War.
He was elected at a by-election in June 1863 as the Member of Parliament (MP) for borough of New Ross, following the resignation of his father. He was the fourth father-and-son-Tottenham to hold the seat in the Westminster Parliament; two previous generations had been MPs for New Ross in the pre-union Parliament of Ireland. (Most of the town of New Ross was owned by the Tottenhams, who let it on short leases. They had shared control of the borough with the Leigh family of Rosegarland, and alternated the nomination of MPs).
Tottenham was re-elected in 1865, but stood down at the 1868 election. He was returned to the House of Commons again a by-election in December 1878, following the death of the Home Rule League MP John Dunbar. However, he was defeated at the 1880 general election by the Home Rule candidate Joseph Foley.
He was a Deputy Lieutenant of County Wicklow.