Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Edward Goulding, 1st Baron Wargrave

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Edward 1st

Died
  
July 17, 1936

Deposed date
  
July 17, 1936


Edward Goulding, 1st Baron Wargrave

Edward Alfred Goulding, 1st Baron Wargrave PC, JP, DL (5 November 1862 – 17 July 1936), known as Sir Edward Goulding, Bt, between 1915 and 1922, was a British barrister, businessman and Conservative Party politician. He sat in the House of Commons between 1895 and 1922, before being ennobled and taking his seat in the House of Lords

Contents

Background and education

Goulding was the son of William Goulding by his second wife Maria Heath Manders, daughter of Edward Manders, of Dublin, Ireland. Sir William Goulding, 1st Baronet, was his elder brother. He was educated at St John's College, Cambridge, and was called to the Bar, Inner Temple, in 1887.

Political career

Goulding was elected at the 1895 general election as the Member of Parliament (MP) for the Devizes division of Wiltshire. He was re-elected in 1900, and held the seat until the 1906 general election, when he stood unsuccessfully in Finsbury Central.

He returned to Parliament two years later, when he was elected as MP for the borough of Worcester at by-election in February 1908, a seat which had been left vacant for two years after a Royal Commission concluded in 1906 that there had been extensive corruption in the borough at the 1906 general election. He was re-elected in Worcester at both the January and December 1910 elections, and was returned as a Coalition Unionist in 1918. He was created a Baronet, of Wargrave Hall in the County of Berks, in 1915 and sworn of the Privy Council in 1918. He stood down from the Commons at the 1922 general election, and was ennobled as Baron Wargrave, of Wargrave Hall in the County of Berks. Apart from his political career he was also chairman of Rolls-Royce Limited.

Personal life

Lord Wargrave died childless in July 1936, aged 73. The baronetcy and barony died with him.

References

Edward Goulding, 1st Baron Wargrave Wikipedia