Sir William Strickland, 1st Baronet

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Sir William Strickland, 1st Baronet (c. 159612 July 1673) was an English Member of Parliament who supported the parliamentary cause during the English Civil War.

Sir William Strickland was the eldest son of Walter Strickland of Boynton, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, inheriting his estate on his death in 1636. He was educated at Queens’ College, Cambridge and Gray’s Inn[1], though he seems not to have qualified as a barrister. He was knighted in 1630 [2], and in 1640 was elected to Parliament as member for Hedon[3]. Initially he seems to have been a friend and supporter of the Earl of Strafford[4], to whom he was distantly related (Strickland’s mother was a Wentworth), although he is not one of the MPs who was listed as voting against Strafford’s attainder. Strickland was a strict Puritan, and after Strafford’s death he moved firmly towards the Parliamentary cause, although the king created him a baronet on 29 July 1641, perhaps hoping to sway him towards support for the Crown.

Strickland sat for Hedon throughout the Long Parliament, taking a hard line in support of the Commonwealth and later of Cromwell. (An opposition pamphleteer described him as “for settling the Protector anew in all those things for which the king was cut off” [5].) He also spoke frequently in favour of the punishment of James Naylor. After the expulsion of the Rump, he sat in the Protectorate Parliaments of 1654 and 1656 as one of the four members for the East Riding[6], and was subsequently summoned to Cromwell’s House of Peers as Lord Strickland. (His younger brother, Walter Strickland, was also a member, and held a number of other senior offices during the Commonwealth.) Strickland sat in the restored Long Parliament, but apparently took no part in its proceedings and (unlike his brother) seems to have retired entirely from public affairs after the Restoration, though he was not molested by the authorities.

From 1642 to 1646, Strickland was Custos Rotulorum of the East Riding of Yorkshire.

He was married twice – on 18 June 1622 to Margaret, daughter of Sir Richard Cholmley of Whitby; and, after his first wife’s death in 1629 to Frances Finch, daughter of the Earl of Winchilsea. He had four daughters by his first marriage, and one son, Thomas, by his second, who succeeded him in the baronetcy.

Honorary Titles
Preceded by
Sir William Alford
Custos Rotulorum of the East Riding of Yorkshire
1642-1646
Interregnum
Baronetage of England
New creation Baronet
(of Boynton)
1641-1673
Succeeded by
Thomas Strickland

[edit] References

  • Dictionary of National Biography
  • J Foster, "Pedigrees of the County Families of Yorkshire" (1874)
  • Victoria County History of the East Riding of Yorkshire
  • Who’s Who In Yorkshire (1912)
  1. ^ A. Gooder (ed.) “The Parliamentary Representation of Yorkshire, 1258-1832” (Yorkshire Archaeological Society, Record Series, 1935)
  2. ^ Lord Hawkesbury, “Some East Riding Families” (Transactions of the East Riding Antiquarian Society, 1899)
  3. ^ G R Park, “The Parliamentary Representation of Yorkshire” (1886)
  4. ^ C.V. Wedgwood, “Thomas Wentworth, First Earl of Strafford, 1593–1641: A Revaluation” (1961)
  5. ^ Harleian Miscellany, iii, 486, quoted in the Dictionary of National Biography)
  6. ^ A. Gooder (ed.) “The Parliamentary Representation of Yorkshire, 1258-1832” (Yorkshire Archaeological Society, Record Series, 1935)