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Murrough John Wilson

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Succeeded by
  
Thomas Dugdale

Name
  
Murrough Wilson

Rank
  
Lieutenant colonel

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Battles and wars
  
World War I

Alma mater
  
Marlborough College

Constituency
  
Richmond (Yorks)

Education
  
Marlborough College


Murrough John Wilson

Preceded by
  
The Hon. William Orde-Powlett

Relations
  
Sir Frank O'Brien Wilson (brother) James Edward Ramsden (grandnephew)

Died
  
April 20, 1946, Cliffe, United Kingdom

Service/branch
  
British Army, Army Reserve

Political party
  
Conservative Party

Murrough John Wilson Top # 16 Facts


Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Murrough John Wilson (14 September 1875 – 20 April 1946) was a British Army officer, member of parliament, and railway executive. He served as the Unionist MP for Richmond (Yorkshire) from 1918 to 1929.

Murrough John Wilson Murrough John WILSON

Wilson was born at Cliffe Hall, his father's property on the southern bank of the River Tees (lying west of Darlington, County Durham, in what is now the district of Richmondshire, North Yorkshire). His father, Col. John Gerald Wilson CB, was an officer in the York and Lancaster Regiment, and died of wounds during the Boer War, at Tweebosch. Murrough Wilson was one of seven children, and the second-oldest of four brothers. The oldest brother, Lt. Richard Bassett Wilson, was also killed in the Boer War, at Rustenburg. The third brother, Lt.-Col. Denis Daly Wilson MC, was killed in action in France during the First World War, while the fourth brother, Capt. Sir Frank O'Brien Wilson, was a Royal Navy officer and later a member of the Legislative Council of Kenya. The brothers' nephew through their youngest sister was James Ramsden, a Cabinet member as the final Secretary of State for War.

Educated at Marlborough College, Wilson joined the North Eastern Railway (NER) in 1893, and by 1912 was a director at the company. An officer with the 2nd/5th Battalion of the West Yorkshire Regiment during the First World War, he was elected to parliament at the 1918 general election, which, as the first after the conclusion of the war, was considered a "khaki" election. Wilson, who stood as a Unionist for the Yorkshire constituency of Richmond, was one of the flood of Coalition MPs elected, although he was replacing a fellow Conservative, William Orde-Powlett (later Lord Bolton). He was elected unopposed at the following three general elections, in 1922, 1923, and 1924, but left parliament prior to the 1929 election. His successor, Thomas Dugdale (later Lord Crathorne), held the seat for the next 30 years.

Maintaining his directorship of the NER throughout the war, Wilson continued as a director after the formation of the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) in 1923. From 1924, he was chairman of the Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes, for which he was knighted in 1927. A Deputy Lieutenant of the North Riding of Yorkshire in later life, he was also a director of the Yorkshire Insurance Company (now part of CGU plc), and later sat on the board of the London Electricity Board. Wilson had married Sybil May Milbank, a daughter of Sir Powlett Milbank, 2nd Bt., in 1904, with whom he had four children. She died in 1930, and he remarried in 1934, to Gladys Rhoda Henderson (née MacLean), a widow. Wilson had succeeded his father as lord of Cliffe Hall, and died there in 1946, aged 70. He was described in his obituary in The Times as a "great Yorkshireman, very well known throughout the whole county", and had earlier succeeded the 3rd Baron Grimthorpe as president of the Society of Yorkshiremen in London.

References

Murrough John Wilson Wikipedia