Edmund Bastard (politician)

Edmund Bastard (1758–1816) of Sharpham, Ashprington, Devon, was a British Tory politician. He was the second son of Colonel William Bastard of Kitley House, Yealmpton, Devon by his wife Anne Worsley.

Arms of Bastard: Or, a chevron azure
John Pollexfen Bastard (left) and Edmund Bastard (right), etching by Samuel William Reynolds, after James Northcote (1795), the National Portrait Gallery.

He was Member of Parliament (MP) for Dartmouth from 1787 to 1812. In 1787, he was elected unopposed, after in August 1787 George Rose recommended him to William Pitt. In the Parliament, only two speeches of him are recorded, on 26 and 28 May 1788, on a bill to regulate fishery in Newfoundland. This was related with the position of Darthmouth as one of the main ports of the Newfoundland trade.[1]

On 1 July 1783 Bastard married Jane Pownoll (died 1822), daughter and heiress of Captain Philemon Pownoll (died 1780), Royal Navy, the builder of Sharpham House, by whom he had children including his eldest son and heir, Edmund Pollexfen Bastard (1784–1838), who succeeded John Pollexfen Bastard as MP for Devonshire; and second son, Captain John Bastard (died 1835), Royal Navy, of Sharpham, who succeeded his father as member for Dartmouth. Bastard died in June 1816.[1]

Disambiguation

John Pollexfen Bastard—John Bastard RN and Edmund Pollexfen Bastard—Edmund Bastard

William Bastard 1727–1782Anne Worsley
John Pollexfen Bastard
1756–1816
Edmund Bastard
1758–1816
Jane Pownoll
Edmund Pollexfen Bastard
1784–1838
John Bastard RN
1787–1835
Rev. P. P. Bastard

References

  • John Burke, Bastard of Kitley, A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland Henry Colburn London 1834.


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