Nathaniel Cholmley
Nathaniel Cholmley (15 November 1721 – 11 March 1791) was a British Member of Parliament.
Life[]
He was the son of MP and his wife Catherine, the daughter of Sir John Wentworth, 1st Bt.[1]
He was selected High Sheriff of Yorkshire for 1754–55. [2]
He was elected to Parliament for the constituency of Aldborough from 1756 to 1768 and for Boroughbridge from 1768 to 1774.[1]
He commissioned the remodelling of his seat at Howsham Hall in North Yorkshire, employing Capability Brown to lay out the parkland.
Family[]
Cholmley married three times; firstly in 1750, Catherine, the daughter of of Nostell Priory, Yorkshire, with whom he had two daughters; secondly, in 1757, Henrietta Catherine, daughter of Stephen Croft of Stillington, Yorkshire who gave him a son and two daughters and thirdly, in 1774, Anne Jesse, daughter of Leonard Smelt of Langton, Yorkshire.
References[]
- ^ a b "CHOLMLEY, Nathaniel (1721-91), of Howsham, and Whitby, Yorks". History of Parliament. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
- ^ "No. 9342". The London Gazette. 29 January 1754. p. 1.
- 1721 births
- 1791 deaths
- People from Boroughbridge
- Members of the Parliament of Great Britain for English constituencies
- British MPs 1754–1761
- British MPs 1761–1768
- British MPs 1768–1774
- High Sheriffs of Yorkshire
- Great Britain MP (1707–1800) for England stubs