| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Old Sarum | 1734 |
Robert Nedham, whose grandfather had gone to Jamaica after the civil war, was descended from a younger son of the 1st Viscount Kilmorey [I]. Having settled in England, he did not inherit his father’s Jamaica estates.1M. C. Owen, Sewells of the Isle of Wight, 104-5. Brought in at Old Sarum in 1734 by his brother-in-law, Thomas Pitt, he voted against the Government on the Spanish convention, 8 Mar. 1739, but thereafter he seems to have gone over to the Administration, as he is included in two lists of ministerial supporters who were absent from divisions on the right of search, 21 Nov. 1739, and the Address, 18 Nov. 1740.2Cholmondeley (Houghton) mss. Presumably for this reason he was not put up by Pitt in 1741 and 1747. When Pitt proposed to bring him into Parliament in 1754, Newcastle noted that it was ‘utterly impossible’.3Add. 32995, f. 120. He died August 1762.
