Sir William Ingram, 1st Baronet explained

Honorific Prefix:Sir
Honorific Suffix:1st Baronet
Birth Date:1847 10, df=y
Education:Winchester College, Hampshire
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Cambridge
Mother:Ann Little
Children:3
Party:Liberal
Relatives:Bruce Ingram (son)
Collingwood Ingram (son)
Edward Stirling (father-in-law)
Office:MP for Boston
Term Start:1874
Term End:1880
Alongside:Thomas Parry
Predecessor:John Malcolm
Office2:MP for Boston
Term Start2:1885
Term End2:1886
Successor2:Henry Farmer-Atkinson
Office3:MP for Boston
Term Start3:1892
Term End3:1895
Predecessor3:Henry Farmer-Atkinson
Successor3:William Garfit

Sir William James Ingram, 1st Baronet (27 October 1847 – 18 December 1924) was a British journalist and Liberal politician who was managing director of The Illustrated London News and who sat in the House of Commons in three periods between 1878 and 1895.

Life

Ingram was the son of Herbert Ingram and his wife Ann Little, daughter of William Little, of the Manor House, Eye, Northamptonshire. His father was the founder of The Illustrated London News, and had also been MP for Boston in Lincolnshire. Ingram was educated at Winchester College and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was admitted at the Middle Temple on 12 April 1869, and at the Inner Temple on 15 January 1870 and was called to the bar at Inner Temple on 18 November 1872.

His father and brother died in a shipping accident on Lake Michigan in 1860 and Ingram eventually took over management of the Illustrated London News. He lived at Walton-on-Thames, Surrey and was a J.P. for Surrey and the Cinque Ports, Kent.

In 1874, Ingram was elected as MP for Boston and held the seat until 1880 when representation was suspended. He won the reconstituted seat in 1885 but lost it in the election of the following year. He regained the seat in 1892 but lost it again three years later in 1895. Ingram was created baronet on 9 August 1893.

Ingram married in 1874, Mary Eliza Collingwood Stirling, daughter of Australian politician Edward Stirling of 34, Queen's Gardens, Hyde Park, and of Adelaide, South Australia.[1] [2] His son Herbert succeeded to the baronetcy.Another son was Collingwood Ingram.

Notes and References

  1. Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage 2003, vol. 2, p. 2048.
  2. https://archive.org/stream/debrettshouseo1886londuoft#page/84/mode/2up Debretts House of Commons and the Judicial Bench 1886