Robert Myddelton Biddulph (1805–1872)

Colonel Robert Myddelton Biddulph (20 June 1805 – 21 March 1872) was a British landowner and Member of Parliament for the Liberal Party.His younger brother was Thomas Myddelton Biddulph (1809–1878), an officer in the British Army and courtier.He was Colonel of the Royal Denbigh Rifles Militia from 1840,[2] Lord Lieutenant of Denbighshire from 1841, and an aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria from 1869, holding all these offices until his death.His children included: At his death, his eldest son, Richard, succeeded to Chirk Castle, his wife inherited his London house at 35 Grosvenor Place, and his brother Thomas received a life interest in the estate at Burghill.This article about a Member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom (since 1801), for a Welsh constituency is a stub.
Portrait of Robert Myddleton Biddulph by Henry Richard Graves .
Election poster
Chirk Castle
Henry Richard GravesLiberal PartyRobert Myddelton BiddulphBurghillChirk CastleEton CollegeThomas Myddelton BiddulphBritish ArmyDenbigh BoroughsDenbighshireRoyal Denbigh RiflesLord Lieutenant of Denbighshireaide-de-campQueen VictoriaWoodhouseShropshireWilliam Mostyn OwenMember of ParliamentMontgomeryshireEdward Charles HowardBernard Howard, 12th Duke of NorfolkGrosvenor PlaceThomasNational TrustHistory of ParliamentHansardParliament of the United KingdomFrederick Richard WestJohn MadocksSir Watkin Williams-Wynn, BtWilliam BagotGeorge Osborne MorganMember