CHAMBERLAYNE, Francis (d.1728), of Thorpe, Warws.

Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1715-1754, ed. R. Sedgwick, 1970
Available from Boydell and Brewer

Constituency

Dates

1713 - 1715
11 June 1720 - 26 Sept. 1728

Family and Education

1st s. of Francis Chamberlayne of Thorpe by his w. Mary. unm. suc. fa. 1695.

Offices Held

Biography

Chamberlayne’s uncle, a London merchant, bought the estate of Thorpe, which he left to his younger brother, Chamberlayne’s father, a London cooper. Chamberlayne himself seems to have been connected with the slave trade,1 for, in 1723, he made representations to the board of Trade against a Virginian Act for laying a duty on liquors and slaves.2 Returned for Shoreham in 1713, he lost his seat in 1715, but recovered it at a by-election in 1720, sitting there without opposition for the rest of his life. He was referred to by Newcastle in 1722 as one of the only three Sussex Members who could be called Tories.3 Towards the end of his life he ran into financial difficulties. He died intestate 26 Sept. 1728, owing money to the father of Sir James Colebrooke, Joseph Gascoigne Nightingale, and the East India Company.4

Ref Volumes: 1715-1754

Author: A. N. Newman

Notes

  • 1. Bd. Trade Jnl. 1709-15, p. 490; 1718-22, pp. 144-9 passim; CSP Col. 1719-20, pp. 309, 356, 362.
  • 2. Bd. Trade Jnl. 1723-28, pp. 55, 646.
  • 3. Newcastle to Sunderland, 31 Mar. 1722, Sunderland (Blenheim) mss.
  • 4. PCC Admon. Act Bk. 1728.