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John Freeman Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale

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Monarch
  
George III

Nationality
  
English

Preceded by
  
Henry Addington

Name
  
John 1st


Monarch
  
George III

Spouse
  
Frances Perceval

Preceded by
  
The Earl of Clare

Resigned
  
1802

John Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale

Prime Minister
  
Henry Addington Hon. William Pitt the Younger

Born
  
18 August 1748 London, England (
1748-08-18
)

Role
  
Former Speaker of the House of Commons

Died
  
January 16, 1830, Gloucestershire, United Kingdom

Previous office
  
Speaker of the House of Commons (1801–1802)

Succeeded by
  
Charles Abbot, 1st Baron Colchester

People also search for
  
John Bercow, Viscount Selby, William Gully, 1st Viscount Selby

John Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale, PC, KC, FRS (18 August 1748 – 16 January 1830), known as Sir John Mitford between 1793 and 1802, was an English lawyer and politician. He was Speaker of the House of Commons between 1801 and 1802 and Lord Chancellor of Ireland between 1802 and 1806.

Contents

Background

Born in London, Mitford was the younger son of John Mitford (d. 1761) of Exbury, Hampshire, and Philadelphia, daughter of Willey Reveley of Newton Underwood, Northumberland. The historian William Mitford was his brother. He was educated at Cheam School and sudied law at the Inner Temple from 1772, being called to the bar in 1777.

Career

Having become a barrister of the Inner Temple in 1777, Mitford wrote A Treatise on the Pleadings in Suits in the Court of Chancery by English Bill, a work reprinted several times in England and America. He was made a King's Counsel in 1789.

In 1788 he became Member of Parliament for the borough of Bere Alston in Devon, and in 1791 he successfully introduced a bill for the relief of Roman Catholics, despite being himself a committed Anglican. In 1793 he succeeded Sir John Scott as Solicitor-General for England (receiving the customary knighthood at the same time), becoming Attorney General six years later, when he was returned to parliament as member for East Looe in Cornwall.

In 1794 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society

In February 1801 Mitford was chosen Speaker of the House of Commons and sworn of the Privy Council. Exactly a year later, he was appointed Lord Chancellor of Ireland and raised to the peerage as Baron Redesdale, of Redesdale in the County of Northumberland. Being an outspoken opponent of Catholic Emancipation, Redesdale was unpopular in Ireland. In February 1806 he was dismissed on the formation of the Ministry of All the Talents.

Although Lord Redesdale declined to return to official life, he was an active member of the House of Lords on its political and its judicial sides. In 1813 he secured the passing of acts for the relief of insolvent debtors, and became an opponent of the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts and other popular measures of reform.

Family

Lord Redesdale married Lady Frances, daughter of John Perceval, 2nd Earl of Egmont and sister of Prime Minister Spencer Perceval, in 1803. He took the additional name of Freeman in 1809 on succeeding to the estates of Thomas Edwards Freeman. Lady Redesdale died in August 1817. Lord Redesdale survived her by thirteen years and died at Batsford Park, near Moreton-in-the-Marsh, Gloucestershire, in January 1830, aged 81. He was succeeded in the barony by his only son, John, who was created Earl of Redesdale in 1877.

References

John Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale Wikipedia