William Throckmorton Bromley

William Throckmorton Bromley (c.1726 – 3 March 1769) was an English politician, MP for Warwickshire 1765–1769.

Bromley was the son of William Bromley MP (son of William Bromley MP, Speaker of the House of Commons) and his wife Lucy Throckmorton, daughter of Sir Clement Throckmorton.[1][2]

He was educated at Westminster School, and matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford in 1744, aged 17.[2]

Bromley was elected MP for Warwickshire in a by-election in February 1765, without a contest. He voted against the repeal of the Stamp Act 1765.[2] He was re-elected in 1768.

He died on 3 March 1769.[2]

Family

In May 1756, Bromley married Bridget Davenport, daughter of Richard Davenport. They had one son:[2]

  • William Davenport Bromley (died 1810)[1]
gollark: You mean "linear regression".
gollark: Of course, the machine learning™ thing to do would just be to try all reasonable fractions empirically and see which work best.
gollark: Proportionally.
gollark: I think they mean how many examples should be positive/negative.
gollark: It probably means 00.

References

  1. "Letters of Secretary Bromley". The Gentleman's Magazine. January 1849. pp. 28–29. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
  2. "BROMLEY, William Throckmorton (?1726-69), of Baginton, nr. Coventry, Warws". The History of Parliament. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Sir Charles Mordaunt, Bt
Hon. William Craven
Member of Parliament for Warwickshire
1765–1769
With: Sir Charles Mordaunt, Bt
Succeeded by
Sir Charles Mordaunt, Bt
Sir Thomas Skipwith, Bt
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