Charles Wynn Griffith-Wynne

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Charles Wynn Griffith-Wynne (Finch)

Birthdate:
Death: March 22, 1865 (85)
Immediate Family:

Son of Lord Charles Finch of Aylesford and Jane Wynne, Heiress of Voelas, Denbighshire, and the Griffiths of Cefnamwich (Clayton)
Husband of Sarah Hildyard
Father of Charles Wynn Griffith / Wynne Finch; John Wynne; Charlotte Godley and Sarah Louisa Griffith-Wynne

Managed by: Douglas John Nimmo
Last Updated:

About Charles Wynn Griffith-Wynne

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Griffith-Wynne

Charles Wynn Griffith-Wynne (4 March 1780 – 22 March 1865), sometimes known more simply as Charles Griffith-Wynne, was a British Tory-leaning politician and, between 1830 and 1832, the Member of Parliament (MP) for Caernarvonshire in North Wales.

Early life

Wynne was born in 1780, the son of the MP Charles Finch. and Jane Wynne who had married one another in 1778. The Wynne family had been producing members of parliament for Caernarvonshire since at least as far back as the mid-seventeenth century.

He received his education at Westminster School and at Brasenose College, Oxford, which he left at the end of 1797 after only about six months, possibly in connection with his parents’ separation. He was later a fellow of All Souls College, Oxford between 1800 and 1812.

He took the names Griffith and Wynne by royal licence on 26 June 1804, almost certainly in order to inherit from his mother's family the Wynne family estates surrounding Voelas House (subsequently demolished) in Denbighshire.

Career

He was politically active in the Caernarvonshire constituency from about 1825, and was elected unopposed as the constituency MP in 1830 when the king's death triggered a general election. He was considered a partisan of the Tory government, but was absent from the House of Commons when the government fell a few months later, in November 1830, over the issue of parliamentary reform.

There is no record of his having made a speech in the House of Commons. His voting record in the struggle that marked the run up to the Reform Act 1832 was opposed to the reform agenda of the Whig government of Lord Grey. However, for much of the time he was absent due to illness, and he did not stand for election in the 1832 election, nor subsequently.

Personal

Wynne married Sarah Hildyard in 1812. Their children included Charles Griffiths Wynne-Finch (1815–1874) and Charlotte Griffith-Wynne, better remembered in New Zealand as Charlotte Godley (1821–1907), the wife of John Robert Godley. His youngest daughter Frances Elizabeth Wynne travelled widely and was a keen amateur artist. Another child included their son, John Wynne, who played first-class cricket. Griffith-Wynne became estranged from John in 1864, disinheriting him from his will.

Charles Wynn Griffith-Wynne died on 22 March 1865.

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Charles Wynn Griffith-Wynne's Timeline

1780
March 4, 1780
1815
August 14, 1815
1819
March 31, 1819
1821
November 14, 1821
Pentrefoelas, Conwy, Wales, United Kingdom
1865
March 22, 1865
Age 85
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