Henry Jodrell
Henry Jodrell (bapt. 30 May 1750[1] – 11 March 1814) was an English barrister and Member of Parliament.
He was a younger son of Paul Jodrell of Duffield, Derbyshire, the Solicitor-General to Frederick, Prince of Wales, and his wife, Elizabeth.[2] Richard Paul Jodrell, (1745 – 1831), classical scholar and playwright, and Sir Paul Jodrell (died 1803), physician to the Nabob of Arcot, were his elder brothers.[3] He was educated at Eton school and Lincoln's Inn, where he was called to the bar in 1773, and inherited Bayfield Hall, near the north Norfolk coast, from his mother.
He was Commissioner of Bankrupts 1783-97 and the Recorder of Great Yarmouth 1792–1813. He resigned the recordership in 1813 to avoid having to pass the death sentence on his wife's murderer.[4]
He was MP for Great Yarmouth from 1796 to 1802, and MP for Bramber, Sussex from 1802 to 1812.
He is buried in Letheringsett with a memorial designed by John Bacon.[5]
He married Johanna Elizabeth, daughter of John Weyland of Woodeaton, Oxfordshire. They had no children.
References
- ^ London, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812
- ^ Edmund Farrer, The Church Heraldry of Norfolk, vol. 2, 1889, p. 391
- ^ John Nichols, Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century, vol. 9, 1815, p. 3
- ^ "JODRELL, Henry (?1750-1814), of Bayfield Hall, Norf". History of Parliament. Retrieved 24 December 2017.
- ^ Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1851 by Rupert Gunnis