Richard Henry Alexander Bennet (senior)
Richard Henry Alexander Bennet FRS (11 May 1743 – 14 March 1814) was a British landowner who represented Newport in Parliament from 1770 to 1774.
Richard was the eldest son of Bennet Alexander Bennet and Mary Ash, the daughter of Benjamin Ash of Ongar, Essex. The year before his birth, his father assumed the surname of Bennet upon inheriting the Babraham estate from his mother Levina, daughter of Sir Levinus Bennet, 2nd Baronet. Bennet Alexander Bennet died at the end of 1745, leaving his widow to raise Richard and a sister, Levina (who in 1762 married John Luther). Mary returned to Ongar with her children, and in 1747, married again to Richard Bull.[1]
Richard Henry was educated at Westminster School, where he was sent in 1752.[1] In 1756, Humphry Morice, who controlled the electoral patronage of Newport, returned Richard Bull for one of the seats there. He sold the Babraham estate in 1765. On 20 January 1766, Bennet married Elizabeth Amelia Burrell, the daughter of Peter Burrell, MP for Morice's other borough of Launceston; by her he had one son, Richard Henry Alexander, and two daughters.[1] Bennet was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in the following year.
In 1770, when William de Grey resigned to contest Cambridge University, a vacancy arose at Newport, and Morice put Bennet into Parliament alongside his stepfather. Like his patron, Bennet was an administration supporter, although he voted in opposition on the naval captains' petition for additional pay in 1773 and the bill in 1774 to make Grenville's Act perpetual. At the general election that year, Morice, facing heightened opposition, stood himself in both his boroughs, displacing Bennet. While Morice was victorious in both and chose to sit for Launceston, Bennet did not return to Parliament, and died in 1814.[1] In 1809, he inherited Northcourt Manor, in the Isle of Wight, from his half-sister, Elizabeth Bull.[2]
References
- ^ a b c d Drummond, Mary M. (1964). "Bennet, Richard Henry Alexander (?1742-1814), of North Court, Shorwell, I.o.W.". In Namier, Sir Lewis; Brooke, John (eds.). The House of Commons 1754–1790. The History of Parliament Trust. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
- ^ Page, William (ed.). "Parishes: Shorwell". A History of the County of Hampshire. Vol. 5.
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