Sir Christopher William Codrington | |
Office: | Member of Parliament for East Gloucestershire |
Term Start: | 1834 |
Term End: | 1834 |
Alongside: | Henry Reynolds-Moreton, Hon. Augustus Moreton, Hon. Francis Charteris, Sir Michael Hicks Beach, Bt, Robert Stayner Holford |
Successor: | Michael Hicks Beach Robert Stayner Holford |
Residence: | Dodington Park |
Parents: | Christopher Bethell-Codrington Hon. Harriet Foley |
Children: | Sir Gerald Codrington, 1st Baronet Capt. George Codrington Alice, Lady Vavasour |
Sir Christopher William Codrington (12 March 1805 – 24 June 1864),[1] of Dodington, Gloucestershire, was a Conservative British MP for East Gloucestershire between 7 August 1834 and 24 June 1864 and a landowner in Gloucestershire.
Codrington was the eldest son of Christopher Bethell-Codrington (1764–1843) and the former Hon. Harriet Foley (d. 1843). His father had inherited Dodington Park in Gloucestershire from a relative who disinherited his son; he was required to change his name to Bethell-Codrington (thus his son is also sometimes known as Christopher Bethell-Codrington).[2]
His paternal grandfather was Edward Codrington.[3] His maternal grandparents were Thomas Foley, 2nd Baron Foley of Kidderminster and the former Lady Henrietta Stanhope (herself daughter of the Earl of Harrington). Through his maternal grandmother, Codrington was thus connected to the earls of Sefton, the barons Penrhyn and landed gentry families.
Codrington was first elected to the House of Commons in a by-election on 7 August 1834, to replace Sir Berkeley Guise, 2nd Baronet, who had died on 23 July 1834, as one of the two members for the East Gloucestershire parliamentary constituency. He was re-elected on 10 January 1835, on 5 July 1841, on 27 February 1847 (with his young brother-in-law the Marquess of Worcester), in 1852 again with Worcester.[4] When Worcester's father died in 1853, he became 8th Duke of Beaufort and was translated to the House of Lords. His seat was then filled briefly by Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, 8th Baronet between 9 January 1854 and 29 November 1854 when Hicks-Beach died. A second by-election on 19 December 1854 resulted in the election of Robert Stayner Holford, a wealthy landowner and dilettante, as the second member. Codrington and Holford represented East Gloucestershire for the next ten years, until Codrington's own death in 1864.[4]
In 1836, Codrington married Lady Georgiana Charlotte Anne Somerset (1817–1884), second daughter of Henry Somerset, 7th Duke of Beaufort, and younger daughter by his first wife Georgiana Frederica Fitzroy (d. 1821), a niece of the Duke of Wellington. Georgiana's paternal ancestors included the Schuyler family, the Van Cortlandt family and the Delancey family of British North America.[5] Together, they were the parents of:
Sir Christopher died on 24 June 1864. His elder son Gerald was created a baronet in 1876.[8]