Hugh Taylor (MP) explained

Hugh Taylor (1817–1900) was a British Conservative Party Member of Parliament, a colliery owner with interests in the shipping industry.

Early life

Hugh Taylor was born in Shilbottle in Northumberland in 1817. He was partly educated at the Royal Jubilee School, New Road, Newcastle. His first career as a mariner was short-lived and he became a became a partner in a house of coal factors, in London; and, subsequently, in several very extensive collieries in the North of England, including Haswell, Ryhope, Backworth, Holywell near Seaton Delaval, and East and West Cramlington, as well as in many mines in South Wales.[1]

Personal life

In 1842 Taylor married Mary, the daughter of Thomas Taylor of Cramlington Hall.[2]

In 1862 Taylor bought Chipchase Castle in Northumberland, which in 2014 is still owned by his descendants.[3] [4] The above Hugh Taylor’s father was John Taylor of Shilbottle, who died in 1825 aged 46. Hugh Taylor (1789-1868; he never married) was the brother of the deceased John Taylor.

Political career

In 1852, he successfully contested the borough of Tynemouth for the Conservative party, defeating Ralph Gray (the sitting Whig MP) by 12 votes. However it was found his supporters had been bribing the voters, and he was duly unseated the following year.

He won the seat in 1859 but it seems his political sympathies were certainly leaning towards the Liberal Party, as he voted with them on a number of issues. Hansard records a couple of contributions to maritime debates. He resigned in 1861 and returned to business.[1]

George Hudson

Taylor and George Elliot were both friends of the Railway King George Hudson. By 1869 Hudson was deeply in debt, in bad health and living in exile, so Taylor and Elliot started a subscription fund which they launched with donations of 100 Guineas each. When this closed it was converted into a trust fund (legally protected from Hudson's creditors) which provided Hudson with an income. Hudson returned to England in 1870, and visited Taylor at Chipchase Castle in April that year.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hugh Taylor. Durham Mining Museum. Durham Mining Museum. 10 August 2014.
  2. Web site: Ancestry UK. Hugh Taylor. Ancestry UK. 10 August 2014.
  3. Web site: Castle. Chipchase. History of Chipchase Castle. 10 August 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140812223322/http://www.chipchasecastle.com/history.htm. 12 August 2014. dmy-all.
  4. It may well have been his father, also called Hugh Taylor, that bought the estate but this Hugh Taylor was resident from 1870. Research ongoing.
  5. Book: Beaumont. Robert. The Railway King. 2003. Headline. London. 0-7472-3236-9. 195–200.