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Sir William Molesworth, 8th Bt (1810-1855), Radical politician

Sitter in 6 portraits
Studied at Cambridge and in Germany and Italy. He returned to Britain in 1831, during the parliamentary struggle over reform and was elected as an MP in 1832. Declaring himself a radical, he championed such causes as national education, free trade, the secret ballot, removal of property qualifications for MPs and abolition of the House of Lords. As a radical baronet, he attracted the attentions of George Grote MP, a City banker, and his wife, Harriet, a political activist. He was recruited to their circle; through them he met John Stuart Mill and in 1835 agreed to finance the launch of the London Review and its merger the following year with the Westminster Review. He was also a co-founder of the Reform Club.

NPG 54

The House of Commons, 1833

by Sir George Hayter
oil on canvas, 1833-1843
On display in Room 20 at the National Portrait Gallery
NPG 54

NPG 810

Sir William Molesworth, 8th Bt

by Sir John Watson-Gordon
oil on canvas, 1854
NPG 810

NPG 1125

The Coalition Ministry, 1854

by Sir John Gilbert
pencil, pen and ink and wash, 1855
NPG 1125

NPG 1125a

Engraving after 'The Coalition Ministry, 1854'

by William Walker, after Sir John Gilbert
engraving, 1857
NPG 1125a

NPG D5267

Sir William Molesworth, 8th Bt

by Daniel Maclise
lithograph, 1873
NPG D5267

NPG D5745

Sir William Molesworth, 8th Bt

by Daniel Maclise
lithograph, 1873
NPG D5745

Category
Politics, Government and Political Movements
Groups
Germany
Italy
London
Politicians