Edward Bolton King


Edward Bolton King was a British Whig politician from Umberslade in Warwickshire.

Family

King was the son of Edward King, Vice-Chancellor of the County Palatine of Lancaster, and the grandson of Rev. James King, Dean of Raphoe. He was the nephew of Captain James King, who accompanied James Cook on his last voyage round the world, and Rt. Rev. Walker King, Bishop of Rochester.
In 1828 King married Georgiana, the younger daughter and eventual heiress of Robert Knight of Barrells, Warwickshire, by whom he had one surviving son and six daughters. In 1859 he married Louisa Palmer, by whom he had another son and two daughters.

Career

King was High Sheriff of Warwickshire in 1830, and at the 1831 general election he was elected Member of Parliament for Warwick. He was re-elected in 1832 and 1835, but was defeated at the 1837 general election.
After his defeat he became prominent in the Warwickshire Association for the Protection of Agriculture and stood against the Peelite candidate at the 1847 general election. In the 1857 general election, he was returned unopposed as one of the two MPs for South Warwickshire. The nomination process took place at the Shire Hall in Warwick, where King was nominated by Sir Francis Shuckburgh, who described King as "no Radical but a Whig Conservative". In his acceptance speech, King stated that he had pledged himself to be independent of all political parties, but would support Lord Palmerston, who he believed deserved credit for the satisfactory conclusion of the Crimean War. He served only two years as MP for South Warwickshire, and did not contest the 1859 general election. He was latterly Chairman of the South Warwickshire Liberal Association.
King died on 23 March 1878, aged 77. His will, dated 24 November 1876, made generous provision for his second wife and his children by her, but left most of the rest of his estate in tail to his only son by his first marriage, Edward Raleigh King. His estate was valued at less than £80,000.