Charles Townshend Politician

Charles Townshend (29 August 1725 – 4 September 1767) was a British politician. He was born at his family's seat of Raynham Hall in Norfolk, England, the second son of Charles Townshend, 3rd Viscount Townshend, and Audrey (died 1788), daughter and heiress of Edward Harrison of Ball's Park, near Hertford, a lady who rivalled her son in brilliancy of wit and frankness of expression. At the Dutch university, (Leiden University) where he matriculated on 27 October 1745, he associated with a small knot of English youths, afterwards well known in various circles of life, among whom were Dowdeswell, Wilkes, the witty and unprincipled reformer, and Alexander Carlyle, the genial Scotsman, who devotes some of the pages of his Autobiography to chronicling their sayings and their doings.He represented Great Yarmouth in Parliament from 1747 to 1756, when he found a seat for the admiralty borough of Saltash, subsequently transferring in 1761 to Harwich, another borough where the seat was in the government's gift. Public attention was first drawn to his abilities in 1753, when he delivered a lively attack, as a younger son who might hope to promote his advancement by allying himself in marriage to a wealthy heiress, against Lord Hardwicke's marriage bill. Although this measure passed into law, he attained this object in August 1755 by marrying Caroline Campbell (d. 1794), the eldest daughter of the 2nd duke of Argyll and the widow of Francis, Lord Dalkeith, the eldest son of the 2nd duke of Buccleuch.

Personal facts

Charles Townshend
Birth dateAugust 29, 1725
Birth place
Raynham Hall , Norfolk
Nationality
British people
Date of deathSeptember 04, 1767
Education
University of Oxford
Leiden University
Spouse
Caroline Townshend 1st Baroness Greenwich

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Office holder

monarch
office
President of the Board of Trade
Chancellor of the Exchequer
party
Whigs (British political party)
prime minister
William Pitt 1st Earl of Chatham
successor
William Petty 2nd Earl of Shelburne

Charles Townshend on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.mspong.org/percy/index.htm