Goodwin Wharton

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Goodwin Wharton (8 March 165328 October 1704) was a Whig politician, a younger son of Philip Wharton, 4th Baron Wharton and Jane Goodwin.

An avid mystic, alchemist and treasure hunter, he sent two expeditions to Tobermory to try to raise a galleon from the Spanish Armada wrecked there. Some of his treasure-hunting was done on the advice of his lover, the medium Mary Parish, who claimed to have placed him in contact with faries and eventually God and his angels.

Out of favor under James II for his pronounced Whiggery, he rose to greater eminence after the Glorious Revolution, and was commissioned a lieutenant colonel of cavalry.

He was one of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty from 1697 until 1699.

Parliament of England
Preceded by
Thomas Pelham
Sir Thomas Littleton, Bt
Member for East Grinstead
with William Jephson

1679–1681
Succeeded by
Sir Cyril Wyche
Henry Powle
Preceded by
Sir John Lowther, Bt
Henry Wharton
Member for Westmorland
with Sir John Lowther, Bt

1689–1690
Succeeded by
Sir John Lowther, Bt
Sir Christopher Musgrave, Bt
Preceded by
Thomas Tollemache
Charles Godfrey
Member for Malmesbury
with Sir James Long 1690–1692
George Booth 1692–1695
Craven Howard 1695–1696

1690–1696
Succeeded by
Craven Howard
Sir Thomas Skipwith, Bt
Preceded by
Sir Orlando Gee
Sir Wilfrid Lawson, Bt
Member for Cockermouth
with Sir Charles Gerard, Bt

1695–1698
Succeeded by
William Seymour
George Fletcher
Preceded by
The Viscount Newhaven
Henry Neale
Member for Buckinghamshire
with The Viscount Newhaven 1698–1701, 1702–1704
Robert Dormer 1701–1702

1698–1704
Succeeded by
The Viscount Newhaven
Sir Richard Temple, Bt