Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

John Lloyd Gibbons

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Succeeded by
  
Sir Henry Norman

Role
  
Member of Parliament

Name
  
John Gibbons


Occupation
  
Engineering Surveyor

Nationality
  
British

Resigned
  
October 2, 1900

Preceded by
  
Charles Pelham Villiers

Born
  
25 August 1837 Wolverhampton, Staffordshire, England (
1837-08-25
)

Spouse(s)
  
1. Emma Eliza White (1885 – 1896) 2. Eliza Grey Ballenden (1899 – His death)

Parents
  
Henry Gibbons and Elizabeth Saunders

Died
  
April 25, 1919, Dudley, United Kingdom

John Lloyd Gibbons (25 August 1837 – 25 April 1919) was an engineering surveyor, justice of the peace, county councillor for Bilston and a Liberal Unionist Party Member of Parliament for Wolverhampton South from 1898 to 1900.

Contents

Background

Gibbons was born on 25 August 1837 to Wolverhampton-born manufacturing chemist Henry Gibbons and his wife Elizabeth (née Saunders) from Wednesfield, Staffordshire.

He married Emma Eliza White of Stroud, Gloucestershire in 1885 in Wolverhampton.; she died in 1896. He remarried in 1898 to Eliza Grey Ballenden of Sedgley, Staffordshire.

Politics and public life

Gibbons was county magistrate for the Sedgley Petty Sessions Division.

He was elected as County Councillor for North Bilston in 1891, the same year that the family took up residence at Ellowes Hall, a stately home located in Sedgley, Staffordshire.

He was elected as member of Parliament for Wolverhampton South at the 3 February 1898 by-election following the death of Charles Pelham Villiers on 16 January 1898.

Personal life

Gibbons died on 25 April 1919 and was buried at All Saints Church, Sedgley. His widow sold Ellowes Hall later the same year.

References

John Lloyd Gibbons Wikipedia