Sir John Bland, 5th Baronet (1691 – 9 April 1743) of Kippax Park, Yorkshire and Hulme Hall, Lancashire, was a British landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1713 to 1727.
Bland was at Utrecht in 1712 whilst his father was organising his son's return in the 1713 general election. Bland was duly elected Member of Parliament for Lancashire[3] and also returned unopposed at the next general election in 1715. He was a Tory and his reputation as a Jacobite led to his arrest in November 1715 and also to his removal from the Lancashire bench. At the 1722 general election, Bland again retained his seat unopposed.
He retired from Parliament aged 35 at the 1727 general election and moved the focus of his local political activity from Yorkshire to Lancashire, where his mother had inherited Hulme Hall and the Lancashire estates which covered most of Manchester.
He died at Bath on 9 April 1743. He and his wife had two surviving sons and four daughters. His two sons John and Hungerford succeeded him in turn to the baronetcy.
Sir John, 6th Baronet (1722–1755), was M.P. for Ludgershall, Buckinghamshire from 1754 to 1755,[4] he was a notorious gambler, at one point losing £32,000 in just one evening.[4] In 1751 he would sell Hulme Hall to George Lloyd, F.R.S.[5] In 1755 he fled to France to avoid his creditors, but ultimately committed suicide.[4]