Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
1790–1795 1795–1797 Hugh Hill: Londonderry City: 1790–1795 (died February 1795) Edward Hoare: Banagher: Joseph Hoare: Askeaton: Robert Hobart: Armagh Borough: 1790–1797; Chief Secretary for Ireland, 1789–1793 John Hobson: Castlemartyr: 1792–1797 Peter Holmes: Kilmallock: John Cradock: Castlebar: Hon. Hugh Howard: St Johnstown ...
List of Irish MPs 1692–1693; List of Irish MPs 1695–1699; List of Irish MPs 1703–1713; List of Irish MPs 1713–1714; List of Irish MPs 1715–1727; List of Irish MPs 1727–1760; List of Irish MPs 1761–1768; List of Irish MPs 1769–1776; List of Irish MPs 1776–1783; List of Irish MPs 1783–1790; List of Irish MPs 1790–1797; List ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Irish MPs 1790–1797" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of ...
The 1797 Irish general election was the last general election to the Irish House of Commons, with the Acts of Union three years later uniting the Kingdom of Ireland with the Kingdom of Great Britain. The election followed the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1793 , meaning it was the first general election in Ireland in which Catholics could vote ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Help ... Irish MPs 1790–1797 (262 P) Irish MPs 1798–1800 ...
Sir Hugh Hill, 1st Baronet (1 January 1727 – 10 February 1795) was an Anglo-Irish politician. Hill was High Sheriff of Londonderry City from 1751 to 1753. He was the Member of Parliament for Londonderry City in the Irish House of Commons between 1768 and his death in 1795. [1]
He was a Member of Parliament (MP) in the Parliament of Ireland for Bangor from 1790 to 1797 and for Youghal from 1798 until the Act of Union of 1800. He continued as MP for Youghal in the new enlarged Parliament of the United Kingdom until the United Kingdom general election of 1806. [2] He was made a baronet in 1801. [3]
After the Acts of Union 1800 he continued as UK MP for County Kildare in the first UK Parliament, standing down at the 1802 general election in which his sons John (II) and Robert were elected; [1] both had been Irish MPs alongside their father. [1]