Charles Sibthorp Explained

Charles Sibthorp
Office:Member of Parliament for Lincoln
Term Start:1835
Term End:1856
Office2:Member of Parliament for Lincoln
Term Start2:1826
Term End2:1832
Birth Date:14 February 1783
Birth Place:Lincoln, Great Britain
Death Date:14 December 1855 (aged 72)
Death Place:London, United Kingdom
Party:Tory/Ultra-Tory
Children:Gervaise Waldo-Sibthorp
Parents:Humphrey Sibthorp
Branch: British Army
Serviceyears:1803–1822
Rank:Lieutenant Colonel
Unit:4th Dragoon Guards
Scots Greys

Charles de Laet Waldo Sibthorp (14 February 1783 – 14 December 1855), popularly known as Colonel Sibthorp, was a widely caricatured British Ultra-Tory politician in the early 19th century. He sat as a Member of Parliament for Lincoln from 1826 to 1832 and from 1835 until 1855.

Sibthorp was born into a Lincoln gentry family, the son of Colonel Humphrey Waldo Sibthorp, of Canwick Hall, by his wife Susannah, daughter of Richard Ellison, of Sudbrooke Holme, Lincolnshire. Charles's brother, Richard Waldo Sibthorp (1792–1879), was an Anglican priest who gained notoriety for his 1841 conversion to Roman Catholicism (and who subsequently returned to the Anglican Church).[1] [2] He was commissioned into the Scots Greys in 1803, promoted lieutenant in 1806, and later transferred to the 4th Dragoon Guards, in which he reached the rank of captain. He did not serve abroad and continued in the service until 1822, when he succeeded to the family estates and also succeeded his brother as Lieutenant Colonel of the Royal South Lincolnshire Militia. In 1812, he married Maria Tottenham, daughter and co-heiress of Ponsonby Tottenham, MP for Fethard, County Wexford; they had four children.[2]

Member of Parliament

During Sibthorp's three decades in Parliament, he became renowned, along with Sir Robert Inglis, as one of its most reactionary members. He stoutly opposed Catholic Emancipation,[3] Emancipation of the Jews in England, the Reform Act of 1832, the repeal of the Corn Laws, the 1851 Great Exhibition[4] and the construction of the National Gallery.[5] He was convinced that any changes from the Britain of his youth (in the late 18th century) were signs of degeneracy, that Britain was about to go bankrupt, and that the new railways were a passing fad which would soon give way to a return to "chaises, carriages and stages".[6]

He was opposed to all foreign influences, and offended Queen Victoria with his public suspicions of Prince Albert, the prince consort. His political views, his bluntness in expressing them, and his eccentricities made him the target of both witticisms and cartoons in Punch.

He was returned to Parliament on eight occasions.

Sibthorp died at his home in London, and was succeeded as MP by his son, Gervaise Waldo-Sibthorp.

References

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sibthorp, Richard Waldo . 52.
  2. Web site: Sibthorp, Charles de Laet Waldo . 52.
  3. Book: John F. Michell . Eccentric Lives and Peculiar Notions . April 1999 . Adventures Unlimited Press . 978-0-932813-67-1 . 58–.
  4. Book: John F. Michell . Eccentric Lives and Peculiar Notions . April 1999 . Adventures Unlimited Press . 978-0-932813-67-1 . 59.
  5. Book: Eccentric Lives and Peculiar Notions . John F. Michell . April 1999 . Adventures Unlimited Press . 978-0-932813-67-1 . 60.
  6. Book: John F. Michell . Eccentric Lives and Peculiar Notions . April 1999 . Adventures Unlimited Press . 978-0-932813-67-1 . 61.