George Rushout, 3rd Baron Northwick explained

George Rushout, 3rd Baron Northwick
Birth Date:30 August 1811
Birth Place:Burford, Shropshire
Death Place:Upper Norwood
Education:Harrow School, Christ Church, Oxford
Parents:George Rushout-Bowles & Lady Caroline
Children:1

George Rushout, 3rd Baron Northwick (30 August 1811 – 11 November 1887), was a British Conservative politician.

Background

Northwick was the son of George Rushout-Bowles, younger son of John Rushout, 1st Baron Northwick. His mother was Lady Caroline, daughter of John Stewart, 7th Earl of Galloway. He was born at Burford, Shropshire where his father was then parish Rector.[1]

He was educated at Harrow School and entered Christ Church, Oxford in 1829, graduating as BA in 1833 and MA in 1836.

Political career

Rushout was returned to Parliament for Evesham in 1837. In May 1838 he fought a duel with Peter Borthwick, who had been elected alongside Northwick in 1837 but had been unseated on petition in March 1838, over the election results. He continued to represent Evesham until 1841, and later sat as Member of Parliament for Worcestershire East between 1847 and 1859. The latter year he succeeded his uncle in the barony and to Northwick Park, Gloucestershire and entered the House of Lords.

Military career and other interests

Rushout was commissioned cornet in the 1st Life Guards in 1833, was promoted lieutenant in 1837 and major in 1842, retiring from the army in the latter year.

Lord Northwick was in later life governor of Harrow School and Cheltenham College.

Family

Lord Northwick married Elizabeth Augusta, daughter of William Bateman-Hanbury, 1st Baron Bateman and widow of George Drought Warburton, in 1869. There were no surviving children from the marriage, an only child, a daughter Caroline, dying aged eight in 1878. On 23 January 1886 the couple, then married sixteen years, were awarded the prize of the Dunmow Flitch, "receiving it privately and without the customary forms".

Lord Northwick died at the Queen's Hotel, Upper Norwood, Surrey in November 1887, aged 76, when his titles became extinct. Lady Northwick died in May 1912, aged 80.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Complete Peerage. 1936. St Catherine's Press. 752.