with Lord Rosebery’s daughter, six years his senior. He entered Parliament for Shaftesbury on the interest of his brother-in-law Lord Rosebery in 1818. He supported administration, in which his father was attorney-general. Like his father he voted against the Marriage
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the matter at the Queen’s accession, when a new grant had been drawn up in favour of the 1st Viscount Rosebery. Anxious that his own rights should not be brooked, he had protested against the assumption that his father’s refusal
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... a beautiful girl. She died a year after [at the birth] of her first child, who is living. Lord Rosebery married the second Miss Bouverie [Harriet]: they have four children, and she is gone off, with her brother-in-law, Sir
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his knees’ to the Whig leaders to procure one for him in November 1807.[footnote]After succeeding to the title in 1814, Rosebery continued to take a keen interest in public affairs and early in 1818 he purchased from the patron of
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TOPPING, James (1756-1821), of Whatcroft Hall, Cheshire. Constituency Dates Bodmin 1 Aug. 1806 191806 Thirsk 1806 191807 Ofifces Held KC 23 Apr. 1804; bencher, I. Temple 1804, treasurer 1815; King’s attorney and serjt. cos. pal. of Lancaster and Durham
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