Online Encyclopedia

EDWARD HORSMAN (1807–1876)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 740 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EDWARD HORSMAN (1807–1876)  ,
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English politician, was the son of a well-to-do gentleman of Stirling, and connected on the
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mother's side with the earls of Stair . He was educatedat
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Rugby and Cambridge, and was called to the Scotch bar in 1832, but then took to politics . He was elected to parliament as a Liberal for
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Cockermouth in 1836, and represented that constituency till 1852, when he was defeated; in 1853 he was returned for
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Stroud, and sat there till 1868; and from 1869 till he died he was member for
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Liskeard . He was a junior lord of the
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treasury in Lord Melbourne's administration for a few months during 1841, and became prominent for attacking Lord John Russell's ecclesiastical policy in 1847 and subsequent years . In 1855, under Lord Palmerston, he was made chief secretary for Ireland, but resigned in 1857 . He gradually took up a position as an
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independent Liberal, and was well known for his attacks on the Church, and his exposures of various " jobs." But his name is principally connected with his influence over Robert Lowe (Lord Sherbrooke) in 1866 at the time of Mr Gladstone's Reform
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Bill, to which he and Lowe were hostile; and it was in describing the Lowe-Horsman combination that John Bright spoke of the " Cave of
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Adullam." Horsman died at
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Biarritz on the 30th of November 1876 .

End of Article: EDWARD HORSMAN (1807–1876)
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