Osman Ricardo | |
Office: | Member of Parliament for Worcester |
Term Start: | 30 July 1847 |
Term End: | 12 July 1865 |
Alongside: | Richard Padmore (1860–1865) William Laslett (1852–1860) Francis Rufford (1847–1852) |
Successor: | Alexander Clunes Sheriff Richard Padmore |
Birth Date: | 25 May 1795 |
Residence: | Bromsberrow |
Nationality: | British |
Party: | Liberal, Whig |
Parents: | David Ricardo Priscilla Anne Wilkinson |
Relations: | Samson Ricardo (uncle) |
Osman Ricardo (25 May 1795 – 2 January 1881)[1] was a British Liberal and Whig politician.[2] [3]
Ricardo was born on 25 May 1795 into the wealthy family of Portuguese origin.[4] He was a son of the political economist David Ricardo and Quaker, Priscilla Anne Wilkinson. Among his siblings were David Ricardo, MP for Stroud, and Mortimer Ricardo, who served as an officer in the Life Guards and was DL for Oxfordshire.[5]
The Ricardo family were Sephardic Jews of Portuguese origin who had recently relocated from the Dutch Republic. Among his extended family were uncles Jacob Ricardo (father of John Lewis Ricardo), and Samson Ricardo, also an MP. His maternal great-aunt, Rebecca Delvalle, was wife of the engraver Wilson Lowry, and mother of the engraver Joseph Wilson Lowry and the geologist, mineralogist, and author Delvalle Lowry.[6] [7] [8] [9]
Ricardo was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was first elected Whig MP for Worcester at the 1847 general election,[10] and, becoming a Liberal in 1859, he held the seat until 1865, when he stood down.[11]
In his 1830 book Rural Rides, William Cobbett reports being frightened by a life-sized cross atop the porter's lodge at "Osmond Ricardo's" estate at "Broomsborough" (i.e. Bromsberrow), Worcestershire, on Monday 24 September 1826.[12]