English Peer of the Realm
Thomas Lister, 2nd Baron Ribblesdale (23 January 1790 – 10 December 1832) was an English Peer of the Realm.[1][2]
Lister was the son of Thomas Lister, 1st Baron Ribblesdale, and Rebecca Feilding.[2][3] He attended Westminster School from 1800 to 1804[4] and matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford on 2 November 1807.[5]
In February 1826 he married his second cousin, Adelaide, the daughter of Thomas Lister (1772–1828) of Armitage Park, Staffordshire. They had four children: Thomas, born 1828; Adelaide, born 1827; Isabel, born 1830; and Elizabeth, born 1833 (after Lister had died).[2] He succeeded to the barony on 22 September 1826[1] following the death of his father. He resided at the family estate of Gisburne Park.[6]
In the House of Lords Lister was a supporter of Conservative principles.[6] In October 1831 he voted against the Reform Bill.[6] The result of the vote led to riots across England. Lister had to summon troops from Burnley barracks and arm his own tenants to protect his Gisburne Park estate.[7] In April 1832 he was one of ten peers who had previously voted against the bill but abstained in the subsequent vote.[8] He died later that year at Leamington following a ruptured artery.[9]
His four-year-old son Thomas succeeded to the barony, becoming the youngest Peer of the Realm.[6] His widow, Adelaide, married John Russell, 1st Earl Russell in 1835; she died in 1838.[2]
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