| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Bossiney | 12 Dec. 1747 – 54 |
Sheriff, Northumb. 1747–8.
Ord, who succeeded to his family’s estates in 1745, was returned for Bossiney, presumably as an opposition Whig, by Edward Wortley, with whom his family were closely connected.2Sandwich to Pelham, 4 Oct. 1747, Newcastle (Clumber) mss. See also ORD, John. He did not stand again. As one of the owners of the Walker colliery, then the most important in the north of England, he made mining history with the sinking of the first deep mining shaft in 1762.3New Hist. Northumb. xiii. 44. In later life he was afflicted with an obsession for hanging himself. On his first attempt he was cut down by his servant, the second time the rope broke, but the third time he succeeded,4R. Welford, Men of Mark ’twixt Tyne and Tweed, iii. 236. 24 Jan. 1768.
