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Willoughby Jones

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Sir Willoughby Jones 3rd Baronet (24 November 1820 - 21 August 1884) was a Norfolk landowner and an English Conservative Party politician. He was briefly Member of Parliament (MP) for the Cheltenham constituency

Jones was the son Major-General John Jones, who had earlier fought in the Peninsular and his wife Catherine Lawrence. He inherited the Jones baronetcy from his brother in 1845.

In July 1847 he won the seat of Cheltenham by a majority of 108; however, he was unseated by petition in May 1848. He lived at Cranmer Hall in Norfolk where in 1860 he had to order the felling of the Bale Oak. He was appointed High Sheriff of Norfolk in 1851 [1].

Jones' daughter Maud was deaf and subject to the interest of Alexander Graham Bell, whose initial research on the telephone was to improve communication with the deaf. The Right Reverend Herbert Edward Jones, second son of the third Baronet, was suffragan Bishop of Lewes.

References

  • Alexander Graham Bell The Question of Sign-Language and the utility of signs in the instruction of the deaf (1898)
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Cheltenham
1847–1848 by-election
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by
Edward Roger Pratt
High Sheriff of Norfolk
1851
Succeeded by
Frederick William Irby
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Baronet
(of Cranmer Hall)
1845–1884
Succeeded by
  1. ^ "No. 21181". The London Gazette. 11 February 1851.