Robert Needham Philips

{{Short description|English merchant and manufacturer}}

{{Other people|Robert Philips}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2021}}

Robert Needham Philips DL (1815 – 28 February 1890){{Rayment-hc|b|6|date=March 2012}} was an English merchant and manufacturer in the Lancashire textiles business,{{cite book

|title=Debrett's illustrated House of Commons and the Judicial Bench 1881

|first = Robert Henry |last = Mair

|year = 1867 |publisher = Dean & son

|location=London

|url=https://archive.org/stream/debrettshouseo1881londuoft#page/187/mode/1up

|page=187

|access-date=24 July 2010

}} a Liberal Party politician, and the grandfather of the Whig historian G. M. Trevelyan.

He lived in Manchester and in Warwickshire, and after holding at least three ceremonial appointments he was the Member of Parliament (MP) for the borough of Bury, a mill town which was then in Lancashire, for a total of 22 years between 1857 and 1885.

Family and early life

Philips was the youngest son Robert Philips, a merchant of The Park, Manchester, and his wife Anne née Needham. His older brother Mark{{cite web

|url=http://www.bury.gov.uk/Environment/Planning/PlanningProjects/CountrysideAndWildlife/PhilipsP

|title=Philips Park Restoration Project

|publisher=Bury Council

|access-date=24 July 2010}} (1800–1873) was one of the first two MPs to be elected for Manchester in 1832, after the Great Reform Act had given city parliamentary representation for the first time.{{cite web | url=http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/PRphilipsM.htm | title=Mark Philips | work=Spartacus Educational | access-date=24 July 2010 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111024214052/http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/PRphilipsM.htm | archive-date=24 October 2011 }} The family's extensive estate on the boundary of Whitefield and Prestwich, in Greater Manchester (now within the Metropolitan Borough of Bury), is now Philips Park.

His father's business partnership, Philips, Wood & Co, was dissolved in 1844 after the death of both partners.{{London Gazette

|issue= 20376

|date= 23 August 1844

|page=2957

|city=London

}}

The younger Robert was educated at Rugby School and at Manchester College.Several different institutions have borne the name Manchester College, or a variation thereof. It is unclear which of them is referred to by the entry in Debretts.

He married twice, firstly in 1845 to Anna Maria Yates, daughter of Joseph Brooks Yates{{cite book |last1=Walford |title=County families |year=1882 |isbn=9785871943618 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=psgIAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA508}} from Liverpool, who died in 1850. He married again in 1852 to Anna Maria's cousin, Mary Ellen Yates from London.{{cite web |last1=Pringle |first1=Ian |title=The Philips family of the Park Prestwich |url=http://www.pilkingtons-lancastrian.co.uk/Animals/Philips%20Park.pdf |access-date=22 August 2018}} His daughter Caroline was married in 1869 to George Otto Trevelyan (1838–1928), {{cite EB1911|wstitle= Trevelyan, Sir George Otto |volume= 27 | page = 255 }} who was later a baronet; their youngest son was the historian G. M. Trevelyan (1876–1962), and their eldest son was the Liberal MP Sir Charles Trevelyan (1870–1958), who later joined the Labour Party and served in Ramsay MacDonald's cabinets as President of the Board of Education.

His residences were listed in 1881 as The Park, Manchester, and Welcombe, Stratford upon Avon, Warwickshire. He had inherited Welcombe House in 1873 on the death of his brother, and on his death the estate passed to his daughter Caroline.{{cite book

|title=The borough of Stratford-upon-Avon: Manors

|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=57019

|series=A History of the County of Warwick:,Volume 3: Barlichway hundred

|year=1945

|pages=258–266

|access-date=24 July 2010

}}

Business interests

He was a partner in a partnership of smallware manufacturers, with interests in Staffordshire, Lancashire, Westmorland and London, which was dissolved in 1855.{{London Gazette

|issue= 21840

|date= 18 January 1856

|page=216

|city=London

}} He was also engaged in a similar partnership which was restructured in 1867.{{London Gazette

|issue= 23210

|date= 18 January 1867

|page=335

|city=London

}} After his death in 1890 at the age of 75, a further partnership was dissolved, which had involved a bleaching and dyeing enterprise at Bagley in Lancashire, and bobbin manufacturing at Staveley in Westmorland.{{London Gazette

|issue= 26194

|date= 21 August 1891

|page=4509

|city=London

}}

Political career

Philips was appointed as a Deputy Lieutenant of Lancashire 1853,{{London Gazette

|issue= 21485

|date=14 October 1853

|page=2762

|city= London

}} and of Warwickshire in 1855.{{London Gazette

|issue= 21693

|date=13 April 1855

|page=1458

|city= London

}} He was Sheriff of Lancashire from 1856 to 1857.{{London Gazette

|issue= 21845

|date= 1 February 1856

|page=365

|city= London

}}

He was elected as the MP for Bury at the 1857 general election,{{cite book

|last=Craig

|first=F. W. S.

|authorlink= F. W. S. Craig

|title=British parliamentary election results 1832–1885

|orig-year=1977

|edition= 2nd

|year=1989

|publisher= Parliamentary Research Services

|location=Chichester

|isbn= 0-900178-26-4

|page=72

}} but held the seat for only two years until he stood down from the House of Commons at the 1859 general election. He stood again in 1865, after which he held the seat until he retired from Parliament of the United Kingdom at the 1885 general election.

See also

References

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