Wednesday, 22 January 2014
394 William Cox
Constituency : Finsbury 1857-9, 1861-5
William came in at Finsbury in December 1861 to replace the deceased veteran Thomas Duncombe. He won by 42 votes.
William was a London solicitor and a member of the Common Council of the City of London. Finsbury had a history of competing liberal candidates and he got in as a supporter of Palmerston in 1857. In 1858 he introduced a motion for triennial parliaments but it was defeated. In 1859 he was pushed into third place. The Standard described his campaign thus : "the honourable gentleman neither spared his lungs nor his powers of sitting out the most long-winded debate....He had almost arrived at the distinction of being called a bore... Happily for his peace, his health , and his pocket his too Liberal career has been stopped by an oblivious constituency ".
William was a populist. He opposed acts compelling householders to divert their cesspits.
In the 1865 election William was one of four Liberal candidates and finished third, a long way behind.
He died in 1889 aged 72.
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