biography text
George Trenchard was five times returned for Poole, which his father, secretary of state under William III, had also represented. A Whig, after 1715 he voted consistently with the Administration except on the peerage bill in 1719, which he opposed. His only reported speech was on 2 June 1721, in the committee on the South Sea sufferers bill, when he moved that Sir Theodore Janssen be allowed £50,000 out of his estate. Before the 1754 election he gave his interest at Poole to Sir Richard Lyttelton, on condition that his son John should be made a commissioner of taxes.1Add. 38335, f. 55.
He died 31 Mar. 1758.