peoplepill id: humphrey-howorth
HH
United Kingdom Great Britain
3 views today
3 views this week
Humphrey Howorth
British Member of Parliament

Humphrey Howorth

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
British Member of Parliament
Work field
Gender
Male
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Sir Humphrey Howorth(c.1684–1755), of Maesllwch Castle, Radnorshire, was a British landowner andWhig politician who sat in the House of Commons for 33 years from 1722 to 1755.

Howorth was the son.of Humphrey Howorthand a daughter of Charles Lloyd (died 1698) who brought Maesllwch into the family.He marriedSibel Mainwaring daughterof Roger Mainwaring, He or his father rebuilt the house at Maesllwch Castle andestablished the surrounding park in 1715.

Maesllwch Castle

Howorth was receiver of crown rents in Cheshire from 1714 to 1730 and was knighted on21 August 1715. Because he owned Maesllwch, he had a strong electoral interest atRadnorshireand as a Whig, he was led to believethat it was impossible for the Tories put up against him. However the Duke of Chandos, Lord Lieutenant of the county, who also had a strong interest through stewardship of the King’s manors, decided to lead a sustained campaign against him. At the 1722 general electionHoworth was electedconvincingly as Whig Member of Parliamentfor Radnorshire but it was a fierce and expensive contest. He faced further expensive contests in 1727and1734 which he won but had to counter petitions against the results. By this time, thecontests had cost him at least £10,000, and in 1740 he wrote to Walpole petitioning for the Lord Lieutenant to be replaced. This was unsuccessful and at the 1741 he again faced an expensive contest, which he won. His financial difficulties were compounded when he was ordered to pay into the Treasury £3,000 arrears from the crown rents which he had collectedin Cheshire before he lost the receivership in 1730. As a result, he had to sell much of his estate to his tenants, which affected his political influence. The Duke of Chandos diedin 1744 and in 1746 the stewardship of the Kings Manors was passed to the brother ofHoworth’s friend and ally, Thomas Lewis,and thus the interests were brought together. At the 1747 general election, there was opposition, but no contest. By about 1750 Howorth was described as miserably poor anddependent on any Administration.At the 1754 general election he was returned unopposed. He voted regularly with the Administration but, for all the expense, seems to have made little impression in Parliament.

Howorth’s wife Sibel died on 4 March 1742 and he married as his second wife Mary Williams, widow of Henry Williams of Gwernyfed, Breconshire and daughter of John Walbeoffe of Llanhamlach, Breconshire. He died on 4 February 1755, leaving a son and daughter by his first wife. Maesllwch was encumbered by a mortgage of £26,000, and by the Treasury claim amounting in 1765 to £8,000.Itwas bought by the Clive family.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Humphrey Howorth is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Credits
References and sources
Humphrey Howorth
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes