Sir Charles Cockerell, 1st Baronet

Sir Charles Cockerell, 1st Baronet (18 February 1755 – 6 January 1837)[1] was a Somerset-born Englishman who prospered as an official of the East India Company (EIC) and became a politician. He sat in the House of Commons for most of the period between 1802 and 1837, sitting for five different constituencies.[2]

Life and career

He was born in Bishop's Hull, Somerset, the son of John Cockerell and Frances, daughter of John Jackson of Clapham. Through his mother Cockerell was the great-great nephew of the diarist Samuel Pepys.[3]

After education at Sharpe's school in Bromley-by-Bow and later Winchester College between 1767–9, Cockerell arrived in Bengal, India in 1776 as a writer (clerk) for the EIC's surveyor-general's office. He became friends with Warren Hastings, the first Governor-General of India and Richard Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley, brother of the Duke of Wellington. Whilst employed by the EIC he was also a partner and later principal of the Calcutta bank of Cockerell, Trail & Co. During the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War (1798-9), Cockerell assisted Wellesley as commander of the civil service military force and through financial arrangements with the Bengal government. As a result of these services he was raised to the Baronetage of England on 25 September 1809.[3]

Sezincote House, where Cockerel lived on his return from India.

In 1801 he returned to England to live at Sezincote House in Gloucestershire, which he had inherited from his elder brother, John. He then commissioned another brother, Samuel Pepys Cockerell, to build him a house "in the Indian style".[4]

Whilst remaining as an agent for the EIC, Cockerell was introduced as a Member of Parliament for Tregony by Richard Barwell, whom he had known in India. He was a silent supporter of Henry Addington's ministry and considered doubtful by William Pitt the Younger on the latter's reelection in 1804. After failing to secure a seat in the 1806 Election, Cockerell was returned to Parliament for Lostwithiel in January 1807. He was subsequently MP for Bletchingley from 1809–12, Seaford from 1816-18 and for Evesham from 1819–37.[3] Cockerell served as Mayor of Evesham from 1810 to 1833.[5]

Personal life

On 11 March 1789 in Calcutta, he married Maria-Tryphena (d. 8 Oct. 1789), daughter of Sir Charles William Blunt, 3rd Baronet of the Blunt baronets. He married secondly on 13 February 1808 the Honourable Harriet Rushout, daughter of John Rushout, 1st Baron Northwick. The couple had a son, Charles Rushout Cockerell (b.1809), who succeeded to the baronetcy and two daughters, Harriet-Anne and Elizabeth Maria (d.1832). Charles Rushout Cockerell married the Honourable Cecilia-Olivia, daughter of Thomas Foley, 3rd Baron Foley in 1834.[6]

gollark: For how long?
gollark: I got the exploit details, not code, I mean, after I failed to capture the code through incident reports.
gollark: Your secret facility, after the incident reporter didn't get it.
gollark: I erased it.
gollark: @6_4 accidental spam while I tried to get your code.

References

  1. Leigh Rayment's list of baronets – Baronetcies beginning with "R" (part 2)
  2. Anderson, J. W.; Thorne, R. G. (2009). D.R. Fisher (ed.). "COCKERELL, Charles (1755-1837), of Sezincote, Glos". The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1820-1832. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  3. "COCKERELL, Charles (1755-1837), of Sezincote, Glos". The History of Parliament, University of London. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  4. Herbert, Eugenia W. (2012). Flora's Empire: British Gardens in India. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-8122-0505-3.
  5. https://www.eveshamtowncouncil.gov.uk/evesham-town-mayor/past-mayors.html
  6. The Gentleman's Magazine. 7. 1837. p. 317.
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
John Nicholls
Sir Lionel Copley, Bt
Member of Parliament for Tregony
18021806
With: Marquess of Blandford 1802–04
George Woodford Thellusson 1804–06
Succeeded by
Godfrey Wentworth Wentworth
James O'Callaghan
Preceded by
William Dickinson
the Viscount Lismore
Member of Parliament for Lostwithiel
January 1807 – May 1807
With: the Viscount Lismore
Succeeded by
George Peter Holford
Ebenezer Maitland
Preceded by
Thomas Freeman-Heathcote
William Kenrick
Member of Parliament for Bletchingley
1809 – 1812
With: William Kenrick
Succeeded by
William Kenrick
Sir Charles Talbot, Bt
Preceded by
John Leach
Charles Rose Ellis
Member of Parliament for Seaford
1816 – 1818
With: Charles Rose Ellis
Succeeded by
Charles Rose Ellis
George Watson-Taylor
Preceded by
William Rouse-Boughton
Humphrey Howorth
Member of Parliament for Evesham
1819 – 1837
With: Humphrey Howorth to 1820
William Rouse-Boughton 1820–26
Edward Davis Protheroe 1826–30
Lord Kennedy 1830–31
Thomas Hudson 1831–35
Peter Borthwick from 1835
Succeeded by
Peter Borthwick
George Rushout
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baronet
(of Sezincote)
1809 – 1837
Succeeded by
Charles Cockerell
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