Charles Pelham Villiers was a British politician who hold the record for being the longest serving MP in British Parliament
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Charles Pelham Villiers was a British politician who hold the record for being the longest serving MP in British Parliament
Charles Pelham Villiers born at
Charles Pelham Villiers never married and there is no record for any romantic relationships either.
Charles Pelham Villiers died on January 16, 1898, at the age of 96, in his home in London.
Charles Pelham Villiers was born to Hon. George Villiers and Hon. Theresa Villiers on January 3, 1802 in London, United Kingdom. His father was a politician and statesman.
Dignitaries like Lord Canning were regular visitors at the sprawling house owned by the Villiers and the young Charles Pelham Villiers became interested in politics and statecraft after listening to the discussions his father used to have with political heavyweights of the day.
As a boy, Charles Pelham Villiers studied at the East India Company College also known as Haileybery College and was taught by some of the giants of the day including people like Thomas Malthus.
Villiers entered the famous halls at St. John’s College of Cambridge University at the age of 19 in 1821 and six years later he emerged with a graduate as well as a post graduate degree. The very same year he became a member of Lincoln’s Inn as a barrister.
Villiers started working as a barrister in London in 1827 and quickly made a name for himself in the city. Five years later, he was appointed as the Commissioner of the Poor Law, one of the most important welfare policies of the British Government of the time.
In 1833, Charles Pelham Villiers entered the Court of Chancery as the Examiner of Witnesses. The Court of Chancery was one of the pillars of the British legal system and was often considered to be more powerful than common courts. He held the position for 19 years.
In 1834, Villiers received an invitation from the Liberal Party in the United Kingdom to contest for the seat at Wolverhampton and he promptly agreed. The next year he was elected as a Member of Parliament from Wolverhampton. He would go on to hold on to that seat for 63 years; making it the longest stint as an MP in British history.
Charles Pelham Villiers had extensively campaigned in favour of liberal trade laws that would encourage more business and launched a decade long campaign against the protectionist Corn Laws prevalent in England. The campaign reached its peak 1845 and the law was repealed the very next year.
He served in his capacity as a lawmaker in some of the most important institutions of British politics. In 1853, he was inducted into the Privy Council while a year earlier he had already been appointed as Judge Advocate General. He held the latter post for SIX years.
Charles Pelham Villiers’ life’s work as a Member of Parliament was to free up trade and in that regard it must be said that his long struggle to repeal the Corn Laws has to be his biggest achievement in his career.