| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Tregony | 1806 – Jan. 1808 |
Sheriff, Yorks. 1796 – 97, York 1814.
Capt. Staincross yeomanry 1798.
Wentworth, a Yorkshire country gentleman, was returned after a contest on the interest of Lord Darlington in 1806. He gave a silent support to the Grenville ministry. On 13 Feb. 1807 he wrote to Lord Howick to apologize for his inability to attend the House at present: on 2 Mar. he was ordered to attend ten days later. On 9 Apr. he voted for Brand’s motion against the Portland ministry. Returned again unopposed in 1807, he gave up his seat a few months later, without having drawn attention to himself meanwhile. He was never again in Parliament and died 14 Sept. 1834. He had been obliged to spend his last years in London after the failure in 1825 of Wentworth, Chaloner and Rishworth, the bank with branches at York, Huddersfield and Wakefield in which he was the senior partner, necessitated the sale of the Woolley and Hickleton estates.1Grey mss; H. Clarkson, Memories of Merry Wakefield, 163-4.
- 1. Grey mss; H. Clarkson, Memories of Merry Wakefield, 163-4.
