Henry Sturt, 1st Baron Alington explained

Honorific Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Lord Alington
Office:Member of Parliament
for Dorset
Term Start:1856
Term End:1876
Office2:Member of Parliament
for Dorchester
Term Start2:1847
Term End2:1856
Birth Name:Henry Gerard Sturt
Birth Date:16 May 1825
Nationality:British
Father:Henry Sturt
Occupation:Politician, landowner
Party:Conservative Party

Henry Gerard Sturt, 1st Baron Alington (16 May 1825 – 17 February 1904), was a British peer, Conservative Party politician, and notorious slum landlord in the East End of London.

Early life

He was the son of Henry Sturt, a landowner and politician from Dorset. His father purchased the Lordship of Motcombe, Dorset. His family retained the lordship into the 20th century.[1] He matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1843.

Political career

He was elected to Parliament in 1847 for Dorchester, and re-elected in 1852. In 1856, one of the Conservative MPs for the county of Dorset died. Sturt resigned his Dorchester seat and was elected to the vacant Dorset seat in a by-election. He was re-elected in 1857, 1859, 1865, 1868, and 1874. On 15 January 1876, he was created Baron Alington, of Crichel, and thereafter sat in the House of Lords as a Conservative peer.

Marriages and children

Sturt was twice married. On 10 September 1853, he wed his first cousin, Lady Augusta Bingham, daughter of George Bingham, 3rd Earl of Lucan and Lady Anne Brudenell. They had three children:

On 10 February 1892, Sturt wed Evelyn Henrietta Leigh.

East End landlord

Amongst other holdings, various branches of the family had owned land in London's East End for centuries and the first Lord Alington's son, second Lord Alington "was still in possession of all but a small portion of the combined Pitfield estates in Hoxton when these were submitted to public auction in 1917".[2]

Lord Alington was one of the private landlords specifically named in relation to the terrible conditions in the East End in the London Poverty Maps compiled by Charles Booth in the 1890s. "Some private landlords were also criticised. Infant mortality in Shoreditch, one investigator recorded, was 22 per 1000, much higher than the London average. Quoting an anonymous interviewee, he drew attention to the 'disgraceful meanness' of Lord Alington, who owned the whole parish and 'drew £20,000 from the neighbourhood'."[3]

Notes and References

  1. https://www.ancestry.com/mediaui-viewer/collection/1030/tree/60044783/person/110188762786/media/cae36703-4e08-4a76-8aff-1ecaa854e438 The Lordship of Motcombe, Dorset
  2. Bird . James . Historical introduction: Hoxton, to the west of Hoxton Street . Survey of London . 1922 . 8, Shoreditch . 72–88 . 26 March 2021 . British History Online.
  3. Light . Alison . The general tone is purple . London Review of Books. 2 July 2020 . 42 . 13 .