Col. Charles Ingram, MP

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Charles Ingram, MP

Birthdate:
Birthplace: England
Death: November 28, 1748 (51-52)
England
Place of Burial: England
Immediate Family:

Son of Arthur Ingram, 3rd Viscount Irvine and Isabel Ingram
Husband of Elizabeth Ingram
Father of Elizabeth Bayly and Charles Ingram, 9th Viscount Irvine
Brother of Edward Machel Ingram, 4th Viscount Irvine; Colonel Rich Ingram, 5th Viscount Irvine; Hon John Ingram; William Ingram, Sr.; Arthur Ingram and 3 others

Managed by: Private User
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About Col. Charles Ingram, MP

Family and Education b. 27 Mar. 1696, 7th s. of Arthur Ingram, M.P., 3rd Visct. Irwin [S], bro. of Hon. Arthur and Henry Ingram. educ. Oriel, Oxf. 1714. m. 9 Mar. 1726, Elizabeth, da. and coh. of Charles Scarborough of Windsor, clerk of the Green Cloth, wid. of Francis Brace of Biddenham, Beds., 1s. 3da.

Offices Held

Ensign 3 Ft. Gds. 1718, lt. 1720; capt. 16 Ft. 1724; capt. and lt.-col. 3 Ft. Gds. 1737; maj. and col. 1743; adjutant-gen. 1743; res. 1748.

Biography Returned for Horsham on the family interest, Ingram regularly voted with the Government. Nevertheless his military promotion was so slow that in 1742 his brother, Henry Ingram, 7th Viscount Irwin, wrote to the Duke of Newcastle (15 June) asking on his behalf for a regiment:

He has now been four and twenty years in the service, sat one Parliament, is in this, and brought in the man you wished for [Sir Richard Mill], which I would flatter myself may entitle him to this mark of his Majesty’s favour. In 1747, still without a regiment, Charles wrote to his brother pointing out that he was now the oldest colonel in the army without a regiment, as well as being

in actual service and venturing my life ... If these will not entitle me to a regiment I must get out, for it will be impossible to continue with any credit or reputation to myself after such a slight being put upon me. Lord Irwin took the matter up with the Duke of Newcastle,1 who replied four months later that he had written to the Duke of Cumberland in Germany strongly recommending Ingram’s claim but that ‘his Royal Highness’s answer was not so favourable as I wished it’ and in short that ‘to my great concern, I see no prospect of success’.2 On this Ingram resigned his commission. He died 28 Nov. 1748.

Ref Volumes: 1715-1754 Author: J. B. Lawson Notes 1. Add. 32699, f. 280; 17 and 25 July 1747, Add. 32712, ff. 213, 215. 2. W. Albery, Parl. Hist. Horsham, 89.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Ingram_(British_Army_officer)

General the Honourable Charles Ingram (27 March 1696 – 28 November 1748), was a British soldier and politician.

Ingram was the seventh son of Arthur Ingram, 3rd Viscount of Irvine, by Isabella Machel, daughter of John Machel (or Machell), Member of Parliament for Horsham, of Hills, Sussex. He was a general in the British Army. In 1737 he was returned to Parliament for Horsham (succeeding his elder brother Henry), a seat he held until his death.

Ingram married Elizabeth Scarborough, daughter and co-heiress of Charles Scarborough, Clerk of the Board of Green Cloth, of Windsor, Berkshire, in 1726. They had one son, Charles, later 9th Viscount of Irvine, and three daughters. Elizabeth died in December 1739. Ingram survived her by nine years and died in November 1748, aged 52.

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Col. Charles Ingram, MP's Timeline

1696
1696
England
1727
March 19, 1727
Whitkirk, West Riding, Yorkshire, England
1748
November 28, 1748
Age 52
England
1969
March 27, 1969
Age 52
England
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England