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In 1826, Wilberforce moved from his large house in Kensington Gore to Hendon Park, a more modest property in the countryside of Mill Hill, north of London, [184] [141] where he was joined by his son William and family. William had attempted a series of educational and career paths, and a venture into farming in 1830 led to huge losses, which ...
William Wilberforce (21 July 1798 – 26 May 1879) was a British lawyer, the eldest son of William Wilberforce. He was briefly a Member of Parliament in 1837–38. He was briefly a Member of Parliament in 1837–38.
The children were William (July 1798), Barbara (1799), Elizabeth (1801), Robert (1802), Samuel (1805), and Henry (1807). Following her husband's death in 1833, Barbara Wilberforce spent her time with her sons, Robert and Samuel, or with her sister Ann Neale in Taplow in Buckinghamshire.
William Wilberforce (1759–1833), British politician, evangelical reformer and campaigner against the slave trade Barbara Wilberforce (1777–1847), wife of William; William Wilberforce (1798–1879), first and eldest son of William, a lawyer and Member of Parliament
Wilberforce was pre-deceased by his first wife Agnes Everilda Frances Wrangham (1800–1834) and second wife Jane Legard (d. 1854). [1]He was survived by two sons, William Francis Wilberforce (1833–1905), Vicar of Brodsworth and president of the Oxford Union, [8] and Edward Wilberforce (1834–1914), who became one of the masters of the Supreme Court of Judicature.
Pages in category "Wilberforce family" ... William Wilberforce; William Francis Wilberforce This page was last edited on 16 October 2023, at 02:45 (UTC). ...
Henry Wilberforce was born in 1807, the youngest son of William Wilberforce and his wife, Barbara Ann Spooner. He studied classics and mathematics at Oriel College, Oxford, where he was elected president of the Oxford Union. [1] He graduated BA in 1830, MA in 1833, in the meantime enrolling as a student at Lincoln's Inn.
Inevitably, Wilberforce also became a frequent visitor to Stoke Newington, combining meetings with William Allen and his Quaker circle with visits to his sister Sarah and brother-in-law James. Stephen came to be regarded as the chief architect of the Slave Trade Act 1807, providing Wilberforce with the legal mastermind he needed for its ...