Sir George Strickland, 7th Baronet

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Sir George Strickland, 7th Baronet (26 May 178223 December 1874) was an English Member of Parliament and lawyer.

Strickland was the second son of Sir William Strickland, 6th Baronet, of Boynton in Yorkshire, but his older brother died before him and he inherited the baronetcy on his father's death in 1834.

He started in the law, being called to the Bar in 1810, and practised as a barrister on the Northern Circuit. However, he took an interest in politics, supporting the Whigs and being an ardent supporter of Parliamentary reform and an early advocate of the secret ballot. In 1830, at the height of the agitation over the Great Reform Bill, he stood for Parliament in the by-election for Yorkshire that followed Brougham's appointment as Lord Chancellor, but was defeated by another Whig. However, at the general election the following year both men were returned unopposed,[1] and Strickland helped vote the Reform Bill into law.

His Yorkshire constituency being divided under the Reform Act, he stood and was elected for the West Riding in 1832,[2] which he continued to represent[3] until 1841, in which year he was instead elected member for Preston,[4] a constituency he served for a further sixteen years.[5][6] He remained a reforming member throughout his career, also advocating church reform and relief for dissenters.

Strickland was also a racehorse breeder of some renown. He lived mainly at Boynton, though his address is recorded as Hildenley in his return as MP for Yorkshire in 1831.[1] In 1844 it seems to have been his opposition that was the principal objection to a projected railway joining Bridlington and York, proposed by George Hudson, which would have passed through Boynton; the railway was never built.

In 1865 he inherited from Nathaniel Cholmley extensive estates at Whitby, Howsham and North Elmsall. In accordance with the terms of Cholmley's will, Strickland adopted by Royal License[7] the surname Cholmley and the arms of Cholmley and Wentworth in place of his own and lived the remaining nine years of his life as Sir George Cholmley. On his death in 1874, however, his eldest son and heir Charles reverted to the Strickland surname and arms.

In 1818 he married Mary, daughter of the Reverend Charles Constable of Wassand, by whom he had three sons and two daughters. From the third, Henry, are descended the Strickland-Constables of Wassand who now hold the baronetcy, which they inherited after the direct Strickland line failed in 1938.

[edit] References

  • Memorial inscription, Boynton Church, Yorkshire
  • A Gooder (ed.) “The Parliamentary Representation of Yorkshire, 1258-1832” (Yorkshire Archaeological Society, Record Series, 1935)
  • J Holladay Philbin, "Parliamentary Representation 1832 - England and Wales" (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)
  • M Stenton (ed.), "Who's Who of British Members of Parliament, Volume I: 1832-1885" (Hassocks: Harvester Press, 1976)
  • Victoria County History of the East Riding of Yorkshire
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Viscount Morpeth
Sir John Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone, Bt
William Duncombe
Richard Bethell
Member of Parliament for Yorkshire
with Sir John Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone, Bt
John Charles Ramsden
Viscount Morpeth

1831–1832
Succeeded by
Constituency abolished
Preceded by
New constituency
Member of Parliament for West Riding of Yorkshire
with Viscount Morpeth

1832–1841
Succeeded by
Hon. John Stuart-Wortley
Edmund Beckett Denison
Preceded by
Sir Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood, Bt
Robert Townley Parker
Member of Parliament for Preston
with Sir Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood, Bt 1841–1847
Charles Pascoe Grenfell 1847–1852
Robert Townley Parker 1852–1857

1841–1857
Succeeded by
Charles Pascoe Grenfell
Richard Assheton Cross
Baronetage of England
Preceded by
William Strickland
Baronet
(of Boynton)
1834-1874
Succeeded by
Charles Strickland