Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Thomas Bayley Potter

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Thomas Potter

Role
  
Politician


Died
  
November 6, 1898

Party
  
Liberal Party

Thomas Bayley Potter

Education
  
Rugby School, University of London

Thomas Bayley Potter DL, JP (29 November 1817 – 6 November 1898) was a British Liberal Party politician.

Contents

Biography

Born in Polefield, Lancashire, he was the second son of Sir Thomas Potter and his wife Esther Bayley, daughter of Thomas Bayley. Potter was educated at Rugby School under Dr. Arnold and then at University College, London. In 1863 he was the founder and president of the Union and Emancipation Society. In 1865, Potter entered the British House of Commons and sat as Member of Parliament (MP) for Rochdale until 1895. He was a Justice of the Peace for Manchester and Lancashire, and for the latter also Deputy Lieutenant. In the House of Commons he was known as "Principles Potter".

He also established the Cobden Club and supported Italian Unity and was a personal friend of Garibaldi.

He married firstly Mary Ashton, daughter of Samuel Ashton at the Unitarian Chapel of Gee Cross on 5 February 1846. She died in 1885 and Potter married secondly Helena Hicks, daughter of John Hicks at St Paul's Church, Lambeth, Surrey on 10 March 1887. Potter had four sons and a daughter by his first wife. He died, aged 80 in The Hurst, Sussex and was buried in Heyshott four days later.

At the end of his life Potter spent his vacations in Cobden's old home at Midhurst, where he died on 6 November 1898.

Family

In 1846 Potter married Mary, daughter of Samuel Ashton of Gee Cross, Hyde. They had four sons and one daughter, of whom, the third and fourth sons, Arthur and Richard, and the daughter Edith survived their father. Mrs. Potter died at Cannes in 1885, and Potter, in 1887, married Helena, daughter of John Hicks of Bodmin, who survived him.

References

Thomas Bayley Potter Wikipedia