WHITLEY, Thomas (c.1651-96), of Peel Hall, Cheshire

Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1690-1715, ed. D. Hayton, E. Cruickshanks, S. Handley, 2002
Available from Boydell and Brewer

Constituency

Dates

Mar. 1681
1690 - 1695

Family and Education

b. c.1651, 2nd s. of Roger Whitley*.  educ. Christ Church, Oxf. matric. 29 Oct. 1668, aged 17.  m. lic. 23 Feb. 1680, Elizabeth (d. 1696), da. of Thomas Lewes, Vintner, of Little St. Helen’s, London, 1s. 2da.1

Offices Held

Receiver of revenue, N. Wales and Chester c.1670–86.2

Member, R. Fishery Co. 1677.3

Freeman, Chester 1680–4, Aug. 1688–d., Denbigh 1680, ?Chipping Wycombe 1691; alderman, Chester Aug.–Oct. 1688; jt. constable, Flint Castle 1689–d.; jt. surveyor, Chester Castle 1689–d.; jt. keeper of recs. Cheshire and Flints. 1689–d.; jt. comptroller of pleas, Caern. 1680–d.; custos rot. Flints. 1689–91.4

Biography

The staunch Whiggery which Whitley demonstrated throughout the 1680s was rewarded at the Revolution by his appointment to a number of minor Welsh offices one of which, that of joint constable of Flint Castle, no doubt smoothed his unopposed return for Flint Boroughs in 1690. Lord Carmarthen’s (Sir Thomas Osborne†) analysis of the new House classed Whitley as a Whig. On 8 Jan. 1692 Whitley presented a petition from a Mr Dodsworth asking for financial remuneration for ‘the great charges he had been at in prosecuting his information against papists in Lancashire’, Dodsworth’s information later forming part of the basis for the Lancashire Plot allegations. In January 1694 a bill passed the House enabling Whitley and his father to break the entail on some of their Cheshire estates in order to exchange lands of equal value. At the 1695 election Whitley stood aside at Flint Boroughs and supported the successful candidacy of Sir Roger Puleston. He died on 28 Apr. 1696, and was succeeded by his only son Roger. Whitley should not be confused with his cousin Thomas Whitley of Aston. It was Whitley of Aston who in the early 1700s was involved in prolonged negotiations with the Treasury concerning his debt as surety for the former receiver-general of taxes for Cheshire and North Wales, Morgan Whitley, and who in 1706 obtained an Act allowing him to compound with the Treasury for this debt.5

Ref Volumes: 1690-1715

Author: Eveline Cruickshanks

Notes

  • 1. J. Y. W. Lloyd, Powys Fadog, v. 272–5; London Mar. Lic. ed. Foster, 1457.
  • 2. CSP Dom. 1670, p. 29; Cal. Treas. Bks. iv. 125.
  • 3. Cal. Treas. Bks. vi. 2.
  • 4. Freemen of Chester ed. J. H. E. Bennet (Lancs. and Cheshire Record Soc. li), 172; J. Williams, Recs. of Denbigh, 140; First Wycombe Ledger Bk. (Bucks. Rec. Soc. xi), 233; CSP Dom. 1687–9, pp. 256, 324; 1689–90. p. 312; Cal. Treas. Bks. ix. 168.
  • 5. Luttrell Diary, 117; NLW, Chirk Castle mss E1052, William Eyton to [Sir Richard Myddelton, 1st Bt.*], 23 [Oct. 1695]; Cal. Treas. Bks. xvii. 377; HMC Lords, n.s. vii. 377.