Constituency | Dates |
---|---|
Newcastle-upon-Tyne | 1660 – 4 July 1660 |
Freeman, Newcastle 1660.2Reg. of Freemen (Newcastle Recs. Committee iii), 76.
Calverley was descended from an ancient and widespread Yorkshire gentry family. His father, a younger son, was apprenticed to a Newcastle alderman and married his master’s daughter, but died young. Calverley himself, a lawyer, was occasionally consulted by the great Newcastle companies, but avoided all political commitment or office. He was probably elected to the Convention as substitute for his stepfather Ralph Grey, a prominent member of the corporation, who at the age of 76 could legitimately be excused the long journey to Westminster. He made no speeches and was named to no committees, but he probably supported the Government. Given leave of absence on 29 June 1660, he died in the parish of St. Andrew, Holborn five days later, and was buried in St. Nicholas, Newcastle.3Newcastle Merchant Adventurers (Surtees Soc. xciii), 184; (ci), 232, 245; Newcastle Hostmen (Surtees Soc. cv), 249, 250; Northumb. Vis. Peds. ed. Foster, 65; Rylands Lib. mss. 299, f. 382.