William Joseph Denison, MP | |
Birth Date: | 12 May 1769 |
Birth Place: | West Yorkshire |
Death Place: | Pall Mall, London |
Resting Place: | Bunhill Fields |
Office: | Member of Parliament |
Term Start1: | 1796 |
Term End1: | 1802 |
Alongside1: | John Angerstein |
Predecessor1: | William Smith |
Successor1: | Robert Adair |
Constituency2: | Kingston–upon–Hull |
Term Start2: | 1806 |
Term End2: | 1807 |
Alongside2: | John Staniforth |
Predecessor2: | Samuel Thornton |
Successor2: | Philip Stanhope |
Constituency3: | Surrey |
Term Start3: | 1818 |
Term End3: | 1832 |
Alongside3: |
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Predecessor3: | Samuel Thornton |
Successor3: | Constituency divided |
Constituency4: | West Surrey |
Term Start4: | 1832 |
Term End4: | 1849 |
Alongside4: |
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Predecessor4: | New constituency |
Successor4: | William John Evelyn |
Occupation: |
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Party: | Whig |
Father: | Joseph Denison |
Spouse: | None |
Children: | None |
Relatives: |
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William Joseph Denison (12 May 1769 – 2 August 1849), son of Joseph Denison (c.1726 – 1806), was an English banker, politician, landowner, and philanthropist.
William was born in Princes Street, Lothbury, the only son of Joseph Denison (1726?–1806), who had gone to London from the west of Yorkshire at an early age and amassed a fortune.
William was a highly successful banker and became a senior partner in the firm of Denison, Heywood, & Kennard (based in Lombard Street, London). He also had a long political career, first serving as a Whig MP for between 1796 and 1802. In 1806 he was elected to the constituency of, and represented from 1818 until 1832. Following the passing of the Reform Act 1832 (2 & 3 Will. 4. c. 45), he was returned as an MP for the newly created constituency of, then held the seat for the remainder of his life.[1]
Upon the death of his father in 1806, Denison acquired estates in Yorkshire (Seamer, south of Scarborough) and Surrey (Denbies, near Dorking). During the course of his lifetime, he extended the boundaries of the latter considerably through the purchase of adjoining land from both the Duke of Norfolk and the Earl of Verulam. Denison also increased the size of his financial inheritance to such an extent that, following his death in Pall Mall, London, on 2 August 1849, the gross value of his estate was an estimated £2,300,000 (equivalent to around £184 million in 2017). He was selected High Sheriff of Yorkshire for 1808/09. Having never married, virtually all of his estate passed to his nephew, Lord Albert Conyngham, on condition that he take the surname Denison.
According to the records of The General Cemetery Company (incorporated by act of Parliament in 1832), Denison is buried in plot 8304 at Kensal Green Cemetery.
Attribution