Thomas Horsfall

Thomas Berry Horsfall (20 August 1805 – 22 December 1878)[1] was a Conservative Party politician in England. He was a Member of Parliament (MP) for over 15 years, and was Lord Mayor of Liverpool from 1847 to 1848.

Horsfall was born in Liverpool to Dorothy Hall Berry (1784–1846) and Charles Horsfall (1776–1846), a former Mayor of Liverpool.. He married twice, firstly Jane Anne Marsh in 1834, and latterly Mary Cox in 1847.

He became a magistrate for Lancashire, and also Mayor of Liverpool in 1847 and 1848. In 1848 he was the Head of the Liverpool Architectural and Archaeological Society. He was also elected President of the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce on its foundation in 1849.

He was elected in 1852 as the MP for Derby, but the election was declared void in March 1953.[2] In 1853 he was elected as Member of Parliament for Liverpool, and held the seat until 1868.[1] A Conservative, he was opposed to the re-imposition of a duty on foreign corn, and generally all duties on "the necessaries of life". He opposed the Maynooth Grant and taxes upon income, but not on property. He was in favour of remodelling the Boards of Custom and Excise, extensive Chancery reform and a moderate Parliamentary reform.

In later years Horsfall owned and resided at Bellamour Hall, Colton, Staffordshire. During his lifetime Horsfall made considerable additions to the estate and improved its general appearance. In the village he was esteemed for the interest he took in its inhabitants. The village schools were erected at his expense and were endowed by him. The cemetery adjoining, known as the Closed Burial Ground, was presented by him to the village as a free gift and he also took a very active part in the erection of the District Hospital in Rugeley. Horsfall also built the Reading Room in the village. Bellamour hall was demolished in the 1920s.

His third wife was Sophia Leeke, daughter of William Leeke, the Waterloo historian. They married in 1863.

He died on 22 December 1878 in Newton Abbot, Devon, of "a softening of the brain, paralysis arthesis" and was buried in St. Mary's Church, Colton, Staffordshire.

References

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Michael Thomas Bass, Jr. and
Laurence Heyworth
Members of Parliament of Derby
1852
With: Michael Thomas Bass, Jr.
Succeeded by
Michael Thomas Bass, Jr. and
Laurence Heyworth
Preceded by
Charles Turner and
William Forbes Mackenzie
Members of Parliament of Liverpool
1853 – 1865
With: Henry Liddell to 1855;
Joseph Christopher Ewart, 1855 to 1865;
Samuel Robert Graves from 1865
Constituency divided