Walter Morrison (MP)

Walter Morrison (21 May 1836 - 18 December 1921) was an English Liberal and Liberal Unionist politician who sat in the House of Commons in thre periods between 1861 and 1900.

Morrison was the son of James Morrison and his wife Mary Anne Todd, daughter of John Todd of London. His father was of the firm of Morrison, Dillon, & Co., and was a former MP for Ipswich. He was educated at Eton College and at Balliol College, Oxford graduating BA in 1857, and MA in 1862. He was a J.P. for the West Riding of Yorkshire, and Lieutenant-colonel of the West Riding Rifle Volunteers.[1]

In 1861 Morrison was elected Member of Parliament for Plymouth. He held the seat until 1874.[2] At the 1886 general election he was elected MP for Skipton as a Liberal Unionist and held the seat until 1892. He was re-elected at Skipton in 1895 and held the seat to 1900.[3]

Morrison died at the age of 85.

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Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Viscount Valletort
Sir Robert Porrett Collier
Member of Parliament for Plymouth
1861 – 1874
With: Sir Robert Porrett Collier to 1871
Edward Bates from 1871
Succeeded by
Sampson Samuel Lloyd
Edward Bates
Preceded by
Sir Mathew Wilson, Bt
Member of Parliament for Skipton
18861892
Succeeded by
Charles Savile Roundell
Preceded by
Charles Savile Roundell
Member of Parliament for Skipton
18951900
Succeeded by
Frederick Whitley Thomson