John Gore (died 1763)

John Gore (c. 1689–1763) of Bush Hill, Middlesex was a politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1747 and 1761.

Family

Gore was born c.1689, the second son of William Gore (Lord Mayor of London) by Elizabeth Hampton, daughter of Walter Hampton. He was brother to Thomas Gore (died 1777) and William Gore who were also British MPs.[1][2][3] Gore married and had issue. His daughter Catherine married her cousin, MP Joseph Mellish; his daughter Anne married Joseph's brother, William Mellish MP [4]

Career

Gore was a merchant and in a business partnership with Joseph Mellish who subsequently became his son-in-law. He was director of the South Sea Company from 1711-1712 and 1715 to 1721. He was elected Member of Parliament for Great Grimsby and served from 1747 to 1761.[5].

Gore died on 3 August 1763.[6]

gollark: Interesting question. Probably. I don't know how you could construct that.
gollark: I think that technically makes it not a *regular* regular expression.
gollark: My thing works by building a weirdly structured finite-state machine which matches permutations of "regex", then converting it to a different flat one usable by the `greenery` library, then using it to very slowly convert that into a regex.
gollark: I made a regex which matches all anagrams of regex: `e(e(g(rx|xr)|r(gx|xg)|x(gr|rg))|g(e(rx|xr)|r(ex|xe)|x(er|re))|r(e(gx|xg)|g(ex|xe)|x(eg|ge))|x(e(gr|rg)|g(er|re)|r(eg|ge)))|g(e(e(rx|xr)|r(ex|xe)|x(er|re))|r(e(ex|xe)|xe{2})|x(e(er|re)|re{2}))|r(e(e(gx|xg)|g(ex|xe)|x(eg|ge))|g(e(ex|xe)|xe{2})|x(e(eg|ge)|ge{2}))|x(e(e(gr|rg)|g(er|re)|r(eg|ge))|g(e(er|re)|re{2})|r(e(eg|ge)|ge{2}))`.
gollark: Depends on the database you're using and what the driver code does. In general no.

References

  1. "Gore, John". The History of Parliament. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
  2. "Gore, William". History of Parliament. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
  3. "Gore, Thomas". History of Parliament. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
  4. "Gore, John". The History of Parliament. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
  5. "Great Grimsby". History of Parliament. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
  6. "John Gore". History of Parliament. Retrieved 15 November 2016.


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