Townshend Mainwaring
Townshend Mainwaring Wilson Jones | |
---|---|
Succeeded by | Frederick Richard West |
Personal details | |
Born | 16 March 1807 |
Died | 25 December 1883 Galltfaenan Hall, Trefnant, Denbighshire, Wales | (aged 76)
Nationality | British |
Political party | Conservative |
Spouse |
Anna Maria Salusbury
(m. 1837) |
Parent(s) | Charles Mainwaring Sarah Townshend |
Townshend Mainwaring (16 March 1807 – 25 December 1883) was a British Conservative Party politician.
Family
Townshend Mainwaring was born on 16 March 1807. He was the second son of the Reverend Charles Mainwaring, of Oteley Park, Ellesmere, Shropshire, and Sarah Susannah Townshend, daughter of John Townshend of Hem, Denbighshire. He attended Rugby School and then Brasenose College, Oxford.[1][a]
Mainwaring married Anna Maria Salusbury, the eldest daughter of Colonel John Lloyd Salusbury of Galltfaenan Hall, in February 1837, at which time Mainwaring was living at Marchwiel Hall. The couple went on to have two sons – Charles Salusbury Mainwaring and Reginald Kynaston Mainwaring – and two daughters.[3][4]
Political career
Mainwaring became a magistrate in December 1837.
Other activities
In 1840, Mainwaring was
Mainwaring, who lived at Galltfaenan Hall in Denbighshire after his marriage, had a considerable involvement with the Vale of Clwyd Railway,[13] was involved with the North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways[14] and supported the construction of the Chester and Holyhead Railway. He continued to own Marchwiel until his death at Galltfaenan on 25 December 1883, and also property and lands in other places.[b] An obituary noted his benevolent financing of the construction of a church, parsonage and schools in Trefnant, in memory of his father-in-law, as well as a convalescent home for men in Rhyl. He was also noted to be a supporter of a women's home in Rhyl and of the same town's Royal Alexandra Hospital.[6][16][17] He was buried at Trefnant's Holy Trinity church.[18]
References
Notes
Citations
- ^ Mair, Robert Henry (1868). Debrett's House of Commons and the Judicial Bench. p. 175.
- ^ Finlay, Reginald Mainwaring (1890). A Short History of the Mainwaring Family. Griffiith, Farran, Creeden & Welsh (private circulation). p. 55.
- ^ hdl:10107/4590376.
- ^ "Gallfaenan MSS". Denbighshire Record Office. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
- ISBN 978-0-43619-274-6.
- ^ hdl:10107/3852285.
- hdl:10107/3609911.
- hdl:10107/3749064.
- hdl:10107/3096021.
- hdl:10107/4512074.
- hdl:10107/3772161.
- hdl:10107/3851232.
- ^ "The Opening of the Vale of Clwyd Railway". The North Wales Chronicle and Advertiser for the Principality. 16 October 1858. p. 4. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
- hdl:10107/3306647.
- ISBN 978-0-95227-554-1.
- hdl:10107/4518403.
- hdl:10107/3290357.
- hdl:10107/4451645.