Sir Philip Hales, 5th Baronet

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sir_Philip_Hales,_5th_Baronet an entity of type: Person

Sir Philip Hales, 5e baronnet (vers 1735-12 avril 1824), de Bekesbourne dans le Kent, est un courtisan anglais et député. rdf:langString
Sir Philip Hales, 5th Baronet (c. 1735-12 April 1824), of Beakesbourne in Kent, was an English courtier and Member of Parliament. Hales was the sixth son of Sir Thomas Hales, 3rd Baronet, a long-serving Member of Parliament who held a series of lucrative posts in the Royal Household. He also held a household post, as Groom of the Bedchamber from 1771 until 1812. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Philip Hales (5e baronnet)
rdf:langString Sir Philip Hales, 5th Baronet
xsd:integer 12856468
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rdf:langString Hon. Bartholomew Bouverie 1779–1780
rdf:langString John Cooper 1775–1779
rdf:langString Robert Shafto 1780
rdf:langString Thomas Duncombe 1779
rdf:langString Thomas Bruce
rdf:langString Hon. Henry Seymour-Conway
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for Downton
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for Marlborough
xsd:integer 1773 1775 1784
rdf:langString Sir Philip Hales, 5e baronnet (vers 1735-12 avril 1824), de Bekesbourne dans le Kent, est un courtisan anglais et député.
rdf:langString Sir Philip Hales, 5th Baronet (c. 1735-12 April 1824), of Beakesbourne in Kent, was an English courtier and Member of Parliament. Hales was the sixth son of Sir Thomas Hales, 3rd Baronet, a long-serving Member of Parliament who held a series of lucrative posts in the Royal Household. He also held a household post, as Groom of the Bedchamber from 1771 until 1812. In 1774 he stood for election in two constituencies, Canterbury and Downton. At Canterbury he was badly defeated, but Downton was a pocket borough where his brother-in-law Lord Feversham was influential, and he was successful there, though only after petitioning against the original result; he took his seat in February 1775. He later also served as MP for Marlborough. He is not recorded as having spoken in the House in either of his two periods as an MP. His father's baronetcy had passed to his elder brother, Thomas Pym Hales, in 1762. However, when his brother died on 18 March 1773, his only children were daughters, so Philip as the oldest surviving brother inherited the title. He married Elizabeth Smith, pre 1784, but their only child was also a daughter, Elizabeth. On Philip's death in 1824 he had no male heirs, and the baronetcy became extinct.
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