Henry Galgacus Redhead Yorke (9 December 1802 – 12 May 1848)[1] was a British Whig politician.[2][3][4]
Early life
He was the son of Henry Redhead Yorke and Jane William Andrews, whose father was Keeper of Dorchester Castle, where the elder Henry had been jailed. His father was a West Indian creole of African/British descent; his mother was a manumitted slave from Barbuda and his father was an Antiguan plantation owner and manager.[5] The younger Henry was baptised in Farnham, Surrey in 1805, with the middle name of an ancient British leader, Galgacus. His father died when he was 10 and his three sisters all died in childhood, with only Henry and his brother George reaching adulthood.
He married Elizabeth Cecilia Crosbie, daughter of William Crosbie, 4th Baron Brandon and Elizabeth La Touche, on 26 December 1837 at the British Chaplaincy in Geneva.[7][8] Her parents' marriage was notoriously unhappy, and resulted in scandal when her father publicly accused her mother of adultery with a Cabinet Minister, William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne, although the adultery was never proved. They had a daughter and two sons, Louisa, Henry Francis, and George Galgacus Aylmer, the first two born at Syston Park, Lincolnshire.[7]
Political career
Yorke was elected Whig Member of Parliament for City of York at the 1841 general election; the constituency returned two members and Yorke received 1552 votes (behind John Lowther on 1625).[9] He was reelected, unopposed, in 1847, holding the seat until his death the following year.[4][10] While an MP, regarding himself as a reformer, he lived on Eaton Square and joined the Reform Club.[11] He is the third MP identified by the History of Parliament’s House of Commons 1832-68 project as of mixed ethnicity.[5]
Death
In May 1848 he bought Prussic acid (cyanide) saying it was to put a dog down, then swallowed it in Regent's Park, London, near Gloucester Gate, with several witnesses.[7][9] The verdict of the coroner (who found his brain was inflamed and vascularised) and a jury was that he had been "not in his right mind".[11] An obituary appeared in The Gentleman's Magazine.[9]