William Aldam
William Aldam MP | |||||||||
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File:Aldam, William.jpg | |||||||||
Born | 1813 | ||||||||
Died | 1890 | ||||||||
Occupation | political | ||||||||
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Contents
Notes
Office Notes
APS Council 1838 member
APS Council 1839 member
APS Council 1840 member
APS Council 1847 member
ESL Council 1843-44 Member
ESL Council 1844-45 Member
ESL Council 1845-46 Member
ESL Council 1846-47 Member
ESL Council 1847-48 Member
House Notes
1844.04.09 Publication Committee: Thomas Hodgkin, MD, George Ramsay Esq., J.A. St John Esq., W. Holt Yates, MD, Hon. Mr Elphinstone, Walter K. Kelly Esq., William Aldam, MP, Richard King, MD
1848.06.29 Resolved that the following gentlemen be recommended to the Anniversary Meeting as the retiring Members from the Council: William Aldam Esq., Samuel Duckworth Esq., Beriah Botfield Esq., MP, William Thiselton Dyer Esq., John Clendinning, MD, J. Beete Jukes Esq., M.A., Colonel Skardon
Notes From Elsewhere
William Aldam (20 August 1813 – 27 July 1890)[1][2] was an English Liberal Party politician and MP for the Yorkshire constituency of Leeds between 1841 and 1847.
Aldam studied law at the Middle Temple beginning in 1834 and was called to the bar in 1839 but never practised as a barrister. He became a Justice of the Peace in the West Riding of Yorkshire court of quarter sessions in 1842 and High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1878.[3]
Aldam was noted for promoting the development of railways and canals and for his staunch supporter of free trade.[citation needed] He was born a Quaker but converted to Anglicanism.