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WINDSOR (UK PARLIAMENT CONSTITUENCY)


'Windsor' is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elects one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first past the post system of election.

Contents
Boundaries
History
Members of Parliament
Burgesses in the English Parliament 1510-1707
MPs 1707-1868
MPs 1868-1974
MPs 1997-present
Election results from 1997
Election results 1715-1974
Elections in the 1710s
Elections in the 1720s
Elections in the 1730s
Elections in the 1740s
Elections in the 1750s
Elections in the 1760s
Elections in the 1770s
Elections in the 1780s
Elections in the 1790s
Elections in the 1800s
Elections in the 1810s
Elections in the 1820s
Elections in the 1830s
Elections in the 1840s
Elections in the 1850s
Elections in the 1860s
Elections in the 1870s
Elections in the 1880s
Elections in the 1890s
Elections in the 1900s
Elections in the 1910s
Elections in the 1920s
Elections in the 1930s
Elections in the 1940s
Elections in the 1950s
Elections in the 1960s
Elections in the 1970s
Notes
References
See also

Boundaries


The constituency covers the town of Windsor and various portions of the surrounding area, in Berkshire. It should be noted that from 1974 the local government county boundary changed to add to Berkshire part of the territory north of the Thames. The Eton and Slough areas thus became eligible to be joined with Windsor in a Berkshire county constituency.
'Before 1868': The parliamentary borough of Windsor (sometimes known as New Windsor to distinguish it from the nearby settlement of Old Windsor) was based upon a town in the eastern part of the county of Berkshire in South East England, which grew up around Windsor Castle.
'1868-1918': The boundaries of the parliamentary borough were extended by the Parliamentary Boundaries Act 1868 (31 & 32 Vict., c. 46). The north boundary of the constituency was on the River Thames, which was then the border between Buckinghamshire and Berkshire. In 1868-1885 the constituency was surrounded to the north by the Buckinghamshire seat. The rest of the borough was adjacent to the Berkshire county constituency. Between 1885-1918 the seat to the north of the Thames was the Wycombe division of Buckinghamshire and the other neighbouring constituency was the Wokingham division of Berkshire.
'1918-1950': The parliamentary borough was abolished and replaced by a county division named after 'Windsor'. The local government areas (as they existed in 1918) which comprised the constituency were the Municipal Boroughs of New Windsor, and Maidenhead, with the Rural Districts of Cookham, Easthampstead, Windsor and a part of Wokingham.
'1950-1974': The constituency was reduced in size by the Representation of the People Act 1948, so it comprised the Municipal Boroughs of New Windsor and Maidenhead, with the Rural Districts of Cookham and Windsor. In 1974 much the same area (by then about to become part of the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead established that year), was included in a new constituency named Windsor and Maidenhead.
'1997 to the next general election': When the Windsor constituency was re-created it no longer linked the town of the same name with Maidenhead to the west, for parliamentary purposes. Instead the town of Windsor was joined with Eton and part of Slough north of the Thames. The Parliamentary Constituemcies (England) Order 1995 (SI 1995/1626) defined the constituency. It included, from the Borough of Bracknell Forest, the wards of Ascot, Cranbourne and St Mary's. The Borough of Slough contributed Foxborough ward. The remainder of the seat, in the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, comprised the wards of Bray, Castle, Clewer North, Clewer South, Datchet, Eton North and South, Eton West, Horton and Wraysbury, Old Windsor, Park, Sunningdale and South Ascot, Sunninghill and Trinity.
In 1998 there was a small re-alignment of county boundaries in the north east corner of Berkshire. This transferred to Berks one polling district from Surrey (being a part of that local government county located in the historic county of Middlesex) and another from Buckinghamshire. Some constituency boundaries were re-defined by The Parliamentary Constituencies (England) (Miscellaneous Changes) Order 1998 (SI 1998/3152). The new Slough ward of Colnbrook and Poyle (since re-named Colnbrook with Poyle) was added to 'Windsor' constituency. This change probably involved less than a thousand electors (as the third polling district in the new ward was taken from Foxborough ward, which was already in the constituency).
'From the next general election': Under The Parliamentary Constituencies (England) Order 2007 (SI 2007/1681), the constituency will comprise:-
''From the Borough of Bracknell Forest'': Ascot, Binfield with Warfield, Warfield Harvest Rise, and Winkfield and Cranbourne wards.
''From the Borough of Slough'': Colnbrook with Poyle ward.
''From the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead'': Ascot and Cheapside, Castle Without, Clewer East, Clewer North, Clewer South, Datchet, Eton and Castle, Eton Wick, Horton and Wraysbury, Old Windsor, Park, Sunningdale, Sunninghill and South Ascot wards.

History


Windsor has had parliamentary representation for centuries, first sending a member in 1301, and continuously from 1424. It elected two Members of Parliament until 1868, when the constituency was reformed and its representation reduced to one MP. In 1974, the constituency was abolished and a similar one, Windsor and Maidenhead was created. However, in 1997 the constituency was recreated.
The pre-1832 franchise of the borough was held by inhabitants paying scot and lot (a local tax). Namier and Brooke estimated that, in 1754-1790, there were about 300 electors. In 1832 a new property based franchise replaced the scot and lot qualification. Under the new system, there were 507 registered electors in 1832.
The early political history of the area was strongly influenced by the monarch and members of his or her family. Windsor Castle has been an important royal residence throughout the history of the constituency.
During part of the eighteenth century the Duke of Cumberland (son of King George II) and the Beauclerk family (descended from King Charles II) had political interests in the borough.
King George III became personally involved in the hotly contested 1780 general election. George encouraged local landowner Peniston Portlock Powney to stand by paying him £2,500 from the King's personal account. The King wished to defeat Admiral Keppel, one of the incumbent members. The monarch went so far as to canvass tradesmen who dealt with the royal household. After this royal interference in the election, Keppel only lost by 16 votes. Namier and Brooke suggest the Windsor electorate had an independent strak and were difficult to manage.
The borough representatives before the Reform Act 1832 included soldiers and people connected with the Royal Household, such as Sir Richard Hussey Vivian (MP 1826-1831) and Sir Herbert Taylor (MP 1820-1823). The constituency also returned politicians prominent in national politics, like the Duke of Wellington's elder brother the Earl of Mornington in the 1780s and 1790s or the future Prime Minister Edward Stanley (subsequently the Earl of Derby) in the early 1830s).
The Ramsbottom family filled one seat from 1806 until 1845. The borough had been loyal to the King's Pittite/Tory ministers in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, but became more favourable to the Whig interest after John Ramsbottom (MP 1810-1845) was elected.
By the 1860s the monarch had ceased to interfere in local affairs. The borough fell under the patronage of Colonel R. Richardson-Gardner. Richardson-Gardner was a local landowner, who caused some animosity when following the 1868 general election he evicted tenants who did not support him at the polls. This was the last Parliamentary election the Conservatives lost in Windsor.
Despite (or perhaps because of) his methods, Richardson-Gardner was elected to Parliament in 1874. Successive Conservative MPs, before the First World War, had considerable influence in the constituency; especially when they subscribed generously to local institutions such as a hospital.
The county division created in 1918 combined the town of Windsor, with territory to its west, south and east which had formerly been in the Wokingham division. The incumbent MP for Wokingham up to 1918, Ernest Gardner, was the first representative of the expanded Windsor constituency. The Conservative Party retained the seat continuously, until 1974 when a Windsor constituency temporarily disappeared from the House of Commons.
The re-created constituency, from 1997, has remained reliably Conservative. Despite some Liberal Democrat strength in local elections, particularly in the town of Windsor itself, affluent villages and small towns such as Ascot, Sunninghill and Sunningdale have continued to contribute to Conservative majorities.

Members of Parliament




Burgesses in the English Parliament 1510-1707

As there were sometimes significant gaps between Parliaments held in this period, the dates of first assembly and dissolution are given. Where the name of the member has not yet been ascertained or (in the sixteenth century) is not recorded in a surviving document, the entry ''unknown'' is entered in the table.
The Roman numerals after some names are those used in ''The House of Commons 1509-1558'' and ''The House of Commons 1558-1603'' to distinguish a member from another politician of the same name.
ElectedAssembledDissolvedFirst MemberSecond Member
1510 21 January 1510 23 February 1510 John Welles William Pury
1512 4 February 1512 4 March 1514 John Welles Thomas Rider
1515 5 February 1515 22 December 1515 John Welles Thomas Rider
1523 15 April 1523 13 August 1523 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1529 3 November 1529 14 April 1536 Thomas Ward I William Symonds
1536 8 June 1536 18 July 1536 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1539 28 April 1539 24 July 1540 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1542 16 January 1542 28 March 1544 Richard Ward I William Symonds
1545 23 November 1545 31 January 1547 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1547 4 November 1547 15 April 1552 Richard Ward I Edward Weldon [1]
By January 1552 Thomas Little
1553 1 March 1553 31 March 1553 Richard Ward I Richard Amyce
1553 5 October 1553 5 December 1553 Richard Ward I Thomas Good
1554 2 April 1554 3 May 1554 Richard Ward I Thomas Butler II
1554 12 November 1554 16 January 1555 Richard Ward I William Norris
1555 21 October 1555 9 December 1555 Richard Ward I William Norris
14 January 1558 20 January 1558 17 November 1558 William Hanley William Norris
5 January 1559 23 January 1559 8 May 1559 Thomas Weldon Roger Amyce
1562 or 1563 11 January 1563 2 January 1567 Richard Gallys John Gresham
1571 2 April 1571 29 May 1571 John Thomson Humphrey Michell
12 April 1572 8 May 1572 19 April 1583 Edmund Dockwra Richard Gallys [1]
1576 Humphrey Michell
16 November 1584 23 November 1584 14 September 1585 Henry Neville John Croke III
28 September 1586 13 October 1586 23 March 1587 Henry Neville George Woodward
10 October 1588 4 February 1589 29 March 1589 Henry Neville [3] Edward Hake
26 October 1588 Edward Neville I
1593 18 February 1593 10 April 1593 Henry Neville Edward Neville II
16 October 1597 24 October 1597 9 February 1598 Julius Caesar John Norris
1 October 1601 27 October 1601 19 December 1601 Julius Caesar (Sir) John Norris
1604 19 March 1604 9 February 1611 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1614 5 April 1614 7 June 1614 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1620 or 1621 16 January 1621 8 February 1622 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1623 or 1624 12 February 1624 27 March 1625 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1625 17 May 1625 12 August 1625 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1626 6 February 1626 15 June 1626 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1628 17 March 1628 10 March 1629 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1640 13 April 1640 5 May 1640 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
1640 3 November 1640 5 December 1648 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
6 December 1648 a 20 April 1653 b
1653 c 4 July 1653 12 December 1653 ''unrepresented'' ''unrepresented''
1654 d 3 September 1654 22 January 1655 ''unrepresented'' ''unrepresented''
1656 e 17 September 1656 4 February 1658 ''unrepresented'' ''unrepresented''
1658 or 1659 27 January 1659 22 April 1659 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
''N/A'' f 7 May 1659 20 February 1660 ''unknown'' ''unknown''
21 February 1660 16 March 1660
3 April 1660 25 April 1660 29 December 1660 Alexander Baker Roger Palmer
9 April 1661 8 May 1661 24 January 1679 Sir Richard Braham [4] Thomas Higgons
19 February 1677 Sir Francis Winnington
27 February 1679 6 March 1679 12 July 1679 Sir John Ernle John Powney
5 April 1679 Richard Winwood Samuel Starkey
29 August 1679 21 October 1680 18 January 1681 John Powney John Carey
4 November 1680 Samuel Starkey Richard Winwood
1681 21 March 1681 28 March 1681 Samuel Starkey Richard Winwood
28 March 1685 19 May 1685 2 June 1687 William Chiffinch Richard Graham
11 January 1689 22 January 1689 6 February 1690 Henry Powle Sir Christopher Wren
23 May 1689 Sir Algernon May
6 March 1690 20 March 1690 11 October 1695 Sir Algernon May Baptist May
17 May 1690 Sir Charles Porter William Adderley [5]
20 November 1693 Sir William Scawen
23 October 1695 22 November 1695 6 July 1698 Sir William Scawen The 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge
21 August 1698 24 August 1698 19 December 1700 The 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge Richard Topham
1700 or 1701 6 February 1701 11 November 1701 The 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge Richard Topham
1701 30 December 1701 2 July 1702 The 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge Richard Topham
1702 20 August 1702 5 April 1705 The 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge Richard Topham
1705 14 June 1705 1707 g The 4th Viscount Fitzhardinge Richard Topham

Notes:-

a Date of Pride's Purge, which converted the Long Parliament into the Rump Parliament.

b Date when Oliver Cromwell dissolved the Rump Parliament by force.

c Date when the members of the nominated or Barebones Parliament were selected. The parliamentary borough of Windsor was not represented in this body.

d Date when the members of the First Protectorate Parliament were elected. The parliamentary borough of Windsor was not represented in this body. Windsor formed part of the county constituency of Berkshire for this Parliament.

e Date when the members of the Second Protectorate Parliament were elected. The parliamentary borough of Windsor was not represented in this body. Windsor formed part of the county constituency of Berkshire for this Parliament.

f The Rump Parliament was recalled and subsequently Pride's Purge was reversed, allowing the full Long Parliament to meet until it agreed to dissolve itself.

g The MPs of the last Parliament of England and 45 members co-opted from the former Parliament of Scotland, became the House of Commons of the 1st Parliament of Great Britain which assembled on 23 October 1707 (see below for the members in that Parliament).
MPs 1707-1868

ElectionMemberMember
1707 John, Viscount Fitzhardinge Richard Topham
1708 John, Viscount Fitzhardinge Richard Topham
1710 William Paul[6]
Samuel Masham[7]
Charles Aldworth
Richard Topham
1713 Charles Aldworth Christopher Wren
1715 Robert Gayer[8]
Sir Henry Ashurst, Bt
Christopher Wren
Samuel Travers
1722 Charles, Earl of Burford[9]
Lord Vere Beauclerk
William, Earl of Inchiquin
1727 Lord Vere Beauclerk George, Viscount Malpas[10]
Lord Sidney Beauclerk
1734 Lord Vere Beauclerk Lord Sidney Beauclerk
1741 Henry Fox Lord Sidney Beauclerk [11]
Lord George Beauclerk
1747 Rt Hon. Henry Fox Lord George Beauclerk
1754 Rt Hon. Henry Fox Hon. John Fitzwilliam
1761 Hon. John Fitzwilliam Hon. Augustus Keppel
1768 Hon. Augustus Keppel Lord George Beauclerk [12]
Richard Tonson [13]
Hon. John Hussey-Montagu
1774 Hon. Augustus Keppel Hon. John Hussey-Montagu
1780 Hon. John Hussey-Montagu Peniston Portlock Powney
1784 Hon. John Hussey-Montagu [14]
The Earl of Mornington
Peniston Portlock Powney

YearFirst memberFirst partySecond memberSecond party
1790Peniston Portlock Powney [15] Tory The Earl of Mornington [16] Non Partisan
1794William Grant Tory
1796Henry Isherwood [17] Tory Hon. Robert Fulke Greville Tory
1797Sir William Johnson, Bt Tory
1802John Williams [18] Tory
1804Arthur Vansittart Tory
1806 Edward Disbrowe [19] ToryRichard Ramsbottom [20] Tory
1810 John Ramsbottom, junior
later John Ramsbottom
Non Partisan
1812 Whig
1819The Lord Graves [16] Tory
1820Sir Herbert Taylor [22] Tory
1823Edward Cromwell Disbrowe Non Partisan
1826 Sir Richard Hussey Vivian [23] Non Partisan
1830Whig
1831Rt Hon. Edward Stanley Whig
1832Sir Samuel John Brooke Pechell, Bt Whig
1835Sir John Edmund de Beauvoir [24] Radical
1835Sir John Elley [25] Conservative
1837Robert Gordon Whig
1841 Richard Neville Conservative
1845 George Alexander Reid [26] Conservative
1847Lord John Hay [27] Whig
1850 John Hatchell Whig
1852 Charles William Grenfell Whig
1852Lord Charles Wellesley [28] Conservative
1855Samson Ricardo Whig
1857 William Vansittart [29] Conservative
1859George William Hope [30] Conservative
1863Richard Vyse Conservative
1865Sir Henry Ainslie Hoare, Bt [31] LiberalHenry Du Pré Labouchere [31] Liberal
1866Charles Edwards LiberalRoger Eykyn Liberal

MPs 1868-1974

ElectionMemberParty
1868 ''reduced to one member''
1868 Roger Eykyn Liberal
1874 Robert Richardson-Gardner Conservative
1890 Sir Francis Tress Barry, Bt Conservative
1906 James Francis Mason Conservative
1918 Ernest Gardner Coalition Conservative
1922 Sir Annesley Ashworth Somerville Conservative
1942 Sir Charles Edward Mott-Radclyffe Conservative
1970 Alan Glyn Conservative
1974 ''constituency abolished: see Windsor & Maidenhead''

MPs 1997-present

ElectionMemberParty
1997 ''constituency recreated''
1997 Michael Trend Conservative
2005 Adam Afriyie Conservative

Election results from 1997



★ ''From this result the swing figure given is based on the change in the leading two parties vote totals only, ignoring votes cast for other parties.''

Election results 1715-1974


The bloc vote electoral system was used in two seat elections and first past the post for single member by-elections and general elections from 1868. Each voter had up to as many votes as there were seats to be filled. Votes had to be cast by a spoken declaration, in public, at the hustings (until the secret ballot was introduced in 1872).
''Note on percentage change calculations:'' Where there was only one candidate of a party in successive elections, for the same number of seats, change is calculated on the party percentage vote. Where there was more than one candidate, in one or both successive elections for the same number of seats, then change is calculated on the individual percentage vote.
''Note on sources:'' The information for the election results given below is taken from Sedgwick 1715-1754, Namier and Brooke 1754-1790, Stooks Smith 1790-1832 and from Craig thereafter. Where Stooks Smith gives additional information or differs from the other sources this is indicated in a note after the result. When a candidate is described as Non Partisan for an election this means that the sources used do not give a party label. This does not necessarily mean that the candidate did not regard himself as a member of a party or acted as such in Parliament. Craig's party labels have been varied to take account of the development of parties. Tory candidates are classified as Conservative from the United Kingdom general election, 1835. Whig and Radical candidates are classified separately until the formal establishment of the Liberal Party shortly after the United Kingdom general election, 1859.
1710s1720s1730s1740s1750s1760s1770s1780s1790s1800s1810s1820s1830s1840s1850s1860s1870s1880s1890s1900s1910s1920s1930s1940s1950s1960s1970s

Elections in the 1710s


★ ''On petition, Wren and Gayer were unseated and Ashurst and Travers were seated on 14 April 1715.''
Elections in the 1720s


★ ''Succession of Burford as 2nd Duke of St Albans.''
Elections in the 1730s


★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Beauclerk as a Commissioner of the Navy.''

★ ''Succession of Malpas as the 3rd Earl of Cholmondeley''

★ ''Seat vacated after the appointment of Lord Vere Beauclerk to an office.''

★ ''A double return was made. The House of Commons decided the correct result was Beauclerk 240 (60.00%) and Oldfield 160 (40.00%); a majority of 80 (20.00%). Beauclerk was declared duly elected on 27 March 1738.''
Elections in the 1740s


★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Lord Sidney Beauclerk as Vice-Chamberlain of the Household.''

★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Fox to an office.''

★ ''Death of Beauclerk''

★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Fox as Secretary at War.''
Elections in the 1750s


★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Fox as Secretary of State for the Southern Department.''

★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Fox as Paymaster of the Forces.''
Elections in the 1760s


★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Keppel to an office.''

★ ''Death of Beauclerk.''
Elections in the 1770s


★ ''Death of Tonson.''

★ ''Note (1772): Both Stooks Smith and Napier & Brooke refer to this MP as the Hon. John Montagu.''
Elections in the 1780s


★ ''Note (1784): The Lord Penrhyn was proposed, but declined going to the poll.''

★ ''Death of Hussey-Montagu''

★ ''Note (1787): Lord John Russell was a candidate, but declined going to the poll.''

★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Powney as Ranger of the Little Park.''
Elections in the 1790s


★ ''Death of Powney''

★ ''Death of Isherwood''
Elections in the 1800s


★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Greville as a Groom of the Bedchamber''

★ ''Seat vacated when Williams was declared not duly elected''
Elections in the 1810s


★ ''Resignation of Ramsbottom''

★ ''Death of Disbrowe''
Elections in the 1820s


★ ''Note (1820): From this election Stooks Smith does not append junior to the name of John Ramsbottom.''

★ ''Resignation of Taylor''
Elections in the 1830s


★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Vivian as Commander of the Forces in Ireland''
''Note (1832): Stooks Smith classified Ramsbottom as a Radical candidate from this election. However as Stenton, editing a book composed of Parliamentary biographies published by a contemporary after the Reform Act 1832, described Ramsbottom as being 'of Whig principles' he continues to be classified as a Whig in this article.''

★ ''On petition de Beauvoir was unseated and Elley was seated on 6 April 1835, following a scrutiny.''
Elections in the 1840s


★ ''Note (1841): Later in his career Richard Neville became known as Richard Neville Grenville. A petition was presented challenging this election, but it was withdrawn before a decision was obtained.''

★ ''Death of Ramsbottom''

★ ''Note (1835): John Walter was a candidate, but he retired from the contest before the election.

★ ''Seat vacated on the appointment of Neville as a Lord Commissioner of the Treasury''

★ ''Note (1847): Stooks Smith has the registered electorate as 720.''

★ ''Resignation of Hay''
Elections in the 1850s


★ ''Seat vacated on appointment of Hatchell as Attorney-General for Ireland''

★ ''Death of Reid''

★ ''Note (1852): A petition was presented against Wellesley only, but it was dismissed.''

★ ''Resignation of Wellesley''

★ ''Note (1857): As the number of electors who voted is unascertained, the minimum turnout is calculated by dividing the number of votes by two. To the extent that voters did not use both their votes the turnout figure will be an underestimate.''

★ ''Note (1859): Turnout estimated as in 1857 above. A petition was presented after this election, but it was withdrawn before a formal decision was made upon it.''
Elections in the 1860s


★ ''Note (1863): The full names of Richard Vyse were Richard Henry Richard Howard Vyse.''

★ ''Note (1865): Turnout is estimated, in the same way as for 1857 above. This election was declared void on petition.''

★ ''Constituency reduced to one seat and electorate expanded by the Reform Act 1867 with the constituency boundaries changed by the Parliamentary Boundaries Act 1868, to take effect from the next general election.''

★ ''Note (1868): An election petition was presented, but it was dismissed.''
Elections in the 1870s


★ ''Note (1874): An election petition was presented, but it was dismissed.''
Elections in the 1880s


★ ''Electorate expanded by the Representation of the People Act 1884, but boundaries left unchanged.''
Elections in the 1890s


★ ''Resignation of Richardson-Gardner''
Elections in the 1900s

Elections in the 1910s


★ ''The electorate was expanded, with the parliamentary borough being abolished and its territory becoming part of a county division, with effect from the United Kingdom general election, 1918.''
Elections in the 1920s


★ ''Electorate expanded, on the introduction of universal adult suffrage for the United Kingdom general election, 1929''.
Elections in the 1930s

Elections in the 1940s


★ ''Death of Somerville''
Elections in the 1950s


★ ''From this result the swing figure given is based on the change in the leading two parties vote totals only, ignoring votes cast for other parties.''
Elections in the 1960s

Elections in the 1970s


★ ''Constituency abolished (1974)''

Notes


1. Died.
2. Died.
3. Chose to sit for Sussex
4. Died, April 1676.
5. Died, June 1693.
6. Died in office, May 1711
7. To the House of Lords as Lord Masham, January 1712
8. Not duly elected
9. To the House of Lords, having succeeded to a dukedom, May 1726
10. To the House of Lords, having succeeded to an earldom, May 1730
11. Died November 1744
12. Died May 1768
13. Died 1772
14. Died 1787
15. Died in office, January 1794
16. A peer of Ireland
17. Died in office, February 1796
18. Declared not duly elected
19. Died in office, February 1819
20. Resigned, March 1810
21. A peer of Ireland
22. Resigned, February 1823
23. Resigned on appointment as Commander of Forces in Ireland, February 1831
24. Unseated on petition
25. Seated after a scrutiny
26. Died 1852
27. Resigned 1850
28. Resigned 1855
29. Contested the UK general election, 1865 as a Liberal candidate.
30. Died 1863
31. Election declared void on petition
32. Election declared void on petition

References



★ ''A Chronological Register of Both Houses of the British Parliament''. Robert Beatson, 1807.

★ ''Boundaries of Parliamentary Constituencies 1885-1972'', compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (Parliamentary Reference Publications 1972)

★ ''British Parliamentary Election Results 1832-1885'', compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (Macmillan Press 1977)

★ ''British Parliamentary Election Results 1885-1918'', compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (Macmillan Press 1974)

★ ''British Parliamentary Election Results 1918-1949'', compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (Macmillan Press, revised edition 1977)

★ ''British Parliamentary Election Results 1950-1973'', compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (Parliamentary Research Services 1983).

★ ''The House of Commons 1715-1754'', by Romney Sedgwick (HMSO 1970)

★ ''The House of Commons 1754-1790'', by Sir Lewis Namier and John Brooke (HMSO 1964)

★ ''Social Geography of British Elections 1885-1910''. by Henry Pelling (Macmillan 1967)

★ ''The Parliaments of England'' by Henry Stooks Smith (1st edition published in three volumes 1844-50), second edition edited (in one volume) by F.W.S. Craig (Political Reference Publications 1973))

★ ''Who's Who of British Members of Parliament: Volume I 1832-1885'', edited by M. Stenton (The Harvester Press 1976)

★ ''Who's Who of British Members of Parliament, Volume II 1886-1918'', edited by M. Stenton and S. Lees (Harvester Press 1978)

★ ''Who's Who of British Members of Parliament, Volume III 1919-1945'', edited by M. Stenton and S. Lees (Harvester Press 1979)

★ ''Who's Who of British Members of Parliament, Volume IV 1945-1979'', edited by M. Stenton and S. Lees (Harvester Press 1981)

See also



List of Parliamentary constituencies in Berkshire

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