Charles Bigg Wither, or Charles Bigg-Wither (27 April 1822 – 28 June 1894) was a member of the New Zealand Legislative Council for a short period in 1863.
Early life and ancestry
Wither was born in 1822 at Manydown Park, a manor in Wootton St Lawrence, Hampshire, England.[1] His father was Harris Bigg-Wither (1781–1838), who was Lord of the Manor at Manydown from 1813 to 1833[2] and is famous for having proposed to Jane Austen.[3] The engineer and writer Thomas Plantagenet Bigg-Wither, a son of his eldest brother Lovelace Bigg-Wither (1805–1874), was his nephew.[4] The Lords of the Manor at Manydown were initially from the Wither family. When William Wither V (1733–1789) died, he had no heir, and a cousin with the surname Bigg—the Reverend Lovelace Bigg (1741–1813)—became his successor. He and his sons took on the surname Bigg-Wither. In all New Zealand sources, Charles Bigg Wither is referred to simply as Wither (or C. B. Wither) and thus appears to have used Bigg as his middle name only.
Wither was a member of the Legislative Council from 15 October to 9 November 1863, when he resigned.[9] His membership appeared in a gazette notice (stating that he had been summoned to the council),[10] but he declined the membership.[11]
Wither died at Wensley Hill in Richmond on 28 June 1894.[12] He is buried at Richmond Cemetery.[13] His sons Frederick and James were the executors of his will.[14]