Thomas Lutwyche (baptised 1675 – 1734) of the Inner Temple and Lutwyche Hall, Shropshire, was an English lawyer and Tory politician who sat in the House of Commons almost continuously from 1710 to 1734.
A High Tory, Lutwyche was made Q.C. in 1710.[2] He rejected an offer from Robert Harley to become a judge, in 1711.[3] He delivered on 6 November 1723 a speech in parliament against the bill for taxing Catholics.[2]
At the end of his life, in 1734, Lutwyche bought Wilderhope Manor from Thomas Smalman.[5] He died on 13 November 1734, and was buried in the Inner Temple Church.[2]
Works
Lutwyche left some manuscript law reports from the Queen's Bench. They were published in 1781, in pt. xi. of Modern Reports.[2]
Family
Lutwyche married Elizabeth Bagnall, daughter of William Bagnall of Bretforton and had 2 sons and 3 daughters.[1] Their daughter Anne married Nicholas Fazakerley;[6] their third daughter Sarah married Thomas Geers (died 1753), Member of Parliament for Hereford.[7]
^A P Baggs, G C Baugh, D C Cox, Jessie McFall and P A Stamper, 'Rushbury', in A History of the County of Shropshire: Volume 10, Munslow Hundred (Part), the Liberty and Borough of Wenlock, ed. C R J Currie (London, 1998), pp. 52–72. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/salop/vol10/pp52-72 [accessed 5 April 2017].