Robert Ord, MP

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Robert Ord, MP

Also Known As: "Robert Ord", "Lord Chief Baron of Scotland"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Newbiggin, Northumberland
Death: February 12, 1778 (76-77)
City of Edinburgh, Scotland
Immediate Family:

Son of John Ord and Anne Hutchinson
Husband of Mary Darnell and Mary Ord
Father of Alice Ord; John Ord; Mary Ord; Alice Ord; Elizabeth Ord and 1 other
Brother of Thomas Ord; Ralph Ord; Henry Ord; Nathaniel Ord and Elizabeth Ord

Managed by: Woodman Mark Lowes Dickinson, OBE
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Robert Ord, MP

ConstituencyDatesMITCHELL1734 - 1741MORPETH1741 - Sept. 1755Family and Education b. 1700, 9th s. of John Ord, attorney in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, of Newbiggin, Fenham and Newminster, Northumb. being 5th by his 2nd w. Anne, da. of Michael Hutchinson of Loft House, nr. Leeds; uncle of John and William Ord. educ. L. Inn 1718; called 1724. m. Oct. 1727, Mary, da. of Sir John Darnell, 1s. 5da. suc. bro. Ralph to Hunstanworth and Newbiggin estates 1724; bought Bingfield 1733.

Offices Held

Sec. to chancellor of the Exchequer Feb. 1742-Dec. 1743; dep. cofferer of the Household Dec. 1743-Dec. 1744; chief baron of the Exchequer [S] 1755-75; chancellor of Durham dioc. 1753-64.

Biography A ‘most intimate and particular friend’1 and legal adviser2 of Pulteney’s, Ord was returned for Mitchell by Lord Falmouth in 1734. He spoke for the mortmain bill on 15 Apr. 1736,3 voted against the Administration on the Spanish convention in 1739 and the place bill in 1740; spoke for the Opposition in a debate on the embargo on the provision of victuals on 1 Dec. 1740, and ten days later spoke against the army estimates, extolling the achievements of the Duke of Argyll, who had been recently dismissed from his posts. In 1741 he was returned by Lord Carlisle, to whom he wrote on 14 May:

I had an account ... yesterday that they have done me the honour at Morpeth to choose me one of their representatives. As this is entirely owing to your Lordship’s favour, I hope you will excuse my troubling you with my thanks for it, as the only return in my power to make to your Lordship, and at the same time permit me, like other beggars (I don’t say sturdy ones) because I have already received favours of your Lordship which I do not deserve, to desire the continuance of them.4 After the fall of Walpole, he was one of Pulteney’s friends who were given office, becoming secretary to the new chancellor of the Exchequer, Sandys, whom he followed to the Household In December 1743 as deputy cofferer, both being turned out on the formation of the Broadbottom Administration in December 1744. He voted for the Hanoverians in 1742, 1744 and 1746, but was classed as Opposition in 1747 when he was again returned for Morpeth. By the next Parliament he had rallied to the Administration, vacating his seat on obtaining a judicial office in 1755.

He died 12 Feb. 1778.

Ref Volumes: 1715-1754 Author: Eveline Cruickshanks Notes 1. Wm. Pulteney to Vernon, 16 June 1741, Vernon Pprs. (Navy Recs. Soc. xcix), 241. 2. C. Hanbury Williams, Works, i. 59. 3. Harley Diary. 4. Carlisle mss.


Biographical Summary

Ord or Orde, Robert (d. 1778), chief baron of the Scottish exchequer, was the eldest son of John Orde, under-sheriff of Newcastle-on-Tyne, by Anne Hutchinson. At an early period he removed to Edinburgh, where ultimately he was appointed baron of the Scottish exchequer. He died on 4 Feb. 1778. There is a portrait of him at Ravensworth Castle. By his wife Mary, eldest daughter of Sir John Darnell, knight, he had a daughter Elizabeth, married to Robert Macqueen, lord Braxfield [q. v.], and a son John Ord (1729?–1814). The son was educated at Hackney and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1750, and afterwards obtained a lay fellowship. Having been called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn, he in 1777 became attorney-general of the duchy of Lancaster, and in 1778 master in chancery. He was M.P. successively for Midhurst, Hastings, and Wendover (1774–1790), and was some time chairman of ways and means in the House of Commons. He was F.R.S., and died on 6 June 1814, and was buried in Fulham churchyard.

SOURCE: "Ord, Robert (DNB00)", Wikisource
== Other References ==

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Robert Ord, MP's Timeline

1701
March 27, 1701
1701
Newbiggin, Northumberland
1729
1729
1745
December 11, 1745
1684793, East Lothian, Scotland
1778
February 12, 1778
Age 77
City of Edinburgh, Scotland
1786
1786
Spennymoor, County Durham, UK
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