John Luther (MP)

{{Short description|English politician}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2017}}

{{Use British English|date=May 2017}}

John Luther (c. 1739–1786) was an English politician.

Life

The son of Richard Luther of Ongar, Essex, he was educated at Newcome's School in Hackney, and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he matriculated in 1756, graduating B.A. and M.A. in 1761. He had entered the Middle Temple to study law in 1755.{{acad|id=LTR756J|name=Luther, John}}

File:View From the Bridge (geograph 4401806).jpg

He was elected a member of the Parliament of Great Britain for Essex from 13 December 1763 to 1784.{{cite web|title=Luther, John (?1739–86), of Myles's, nr. Ongar, Essex|url=http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1754-1790/member/luther-john-1739-86|work=The History of Parliament|accessdate=24 June 2012}} A Whig, he left his wife in 1764 and went to Paris at the time when the government was pursuing John Wilkes. Richard Watson persuaded him to return and be reconciled with his wife and family.

The family lived at Great Myles house in Kelvedon Hatch, near Ongar, Essex.

Family

On 20 January 1762 Luther had obtained a licence to marry Levina Alexander Bennet,Ancestry.com. London and Surrey, England, Marriage Bonds and Allegations, 1597-1921, database on-line, Provo, UT, USA. (subscription required) Accessed 15 December 2015 daughter of Bennet Alexander Bennet (1702–1745) and his wife Mary Ash (born 1719), who married again in 1747 to Richard Bull. Levina's brother was Richard Henry Alexander Bennet.

His nephew Francis Fane of Spettisbury (1752–1813), was MP for Lyme Regis and Dorset and inherited Luther's Ongar estate.

Luther left an estate at Petworth, Sussex to Bishop Watson.

References