Online Encyclopedia

JOHN REDESDALE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 968 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

JOHN REDESDALE  FREEMAN-MITFORD, BARON (1748-183o),
See also:
English lawyer and politician. younger son of John Mitford (d . 1761) and
See also:
brother of the historian William Mitford, was born in
See also:
London on the 18th of August 1748 . Having become a
See also:
barrister of the Inner Temple in 1777, he wrote A
See also:
Treatise on the Pleadings in Suits in the Court of
See also:
Chancery by English
See also:
Bill, a
See also:
work of
See also:
great value, which has been reprinted several times in England and
See also:
America . In 1788 Mitford became member of parliament for the borough of Beeralston in Devon, and in 1791 he introduced the important bill for the
See also:
relief of
See also:
Roman Catholics, which was passed into law . In 1793 he succeeded
See also:
Sir John Scott, afterwards Lord Eldon, as
See also:
solicitor-general for England, becoming attorney-general six years later, when he was returned to parliament as member for East
See also:
Looe, in
See also:
Cornwall . In
See also:
February 18o1 Sir John Mitford (as he was now) was chosen
See also:
speaker of the House of
See also:
Commons . Exactly a
See also:
year later, he was appointed lord chancellor of Ireland and was created a peer of the
See also:
United
See also:
Kingdom as Baron Redesdale . Being an outspoken opponent of Roman Catholic emancipation, Redesdale was unpopular in Ireland . In February 18o6 he was dismissed on the formation of the
See also:
ministry of Fox and Lord Grenville . Although Redesdale declined to return to official
See also:
life, he was an active member of the House of Lords both on its
See also:
political and its judicial sides . In 1813 he secured the passing of acts for the relief of insolvent debtors, and later he was an opponent of the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts and of other popular
See also:
measures of reform . Redesdale, who was a
See also:
fellow of the Royal Society and a member of three commissions on the public records, died on the 16th of
See also:
January 183o .

In 1803 he married Frances (d . 1817), daughter of John, 2nd

See also:
earl of Egmont . He took the additional name of Freeman in 1809 on succeeding to the estates of Thomas Edwards Freeman . His only son, John Thomas Freeman Mitford (18o5-1886), succeeded to the title . In 1851 he was chosen chairman of committees in the House of Lords, a position which he retained until his
See also:
death, and in 1877 he was created earl of Redesdale . His chief
See also:
interest was reserved for ecclesiastical questions, and he won some repute as a
See also:
Protestant controversialist . He assisted to revive Convocation in 1853; was an active opponent of the disestablishment of the Irish Church; and engaged in controversy with Cardinal Manning on the subject of communion in both kinds . On his death, on the 2nd of May 1886, his titles became
See also:
extinct . He wrote Thoughts on English Prosody and
See also:
Translations from Horace, and Further Thoughts on English Prosody (Oxford, 1859), in addition to various
See also:
pamphlets on ecclesiastical topics . The earl bequeathed his estates to his kinsman, Algernon Bertram Freeman-Mitford (b . 1837), a great-grandson of William Mitford . He had been in the
See also:
diplomatic service from 1858 to 1873, and had been secretary to the Office of
See also:
Works from 1874 to 1886 .

From 1892 to 1895 he was member of parliament for the

Stratford-on-
See also:
Avon division of
See also:
Warwickshire, and he was created Baron Redesdale in 1902 . He was well known for his writings on
See also:
Japan, Tales of Old Japan (1871), The Attache at Peking (1900), &c . See O . J . Burke,
See also:
History of the Lord Chancellors of Ireland (
See also:
Dublin, 1879) ; J . R . O'Flanagan, Lives of the Lord Chancellors of Ireland (187o) ; Sir J . Barrington,
See also:
Personal Sketches of His Own Times (1869); Sir S . E . Brydges, Autobiography (1834); and C . Abbot, Lord Colchester,
See also:
Diary and Correspondence (London, 1861) .

End of Article: JOHN REDESDALE
[back]
REDDITCH
[next]
REDFERN

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.