Robert James Tennent
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David Robert Ross
Hugh Cairns
Robert James Tennent | |
|---|---|
| Member of Parliament for Belfast | |
| In office 9 August 1847 – 13 July 1852 | |
| Preceded by | John Chichester David Robert Ross |
| Succeeded by | Richard Davison Hugh Cairns |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1803 |
| Died | (aged 76) |
| Party | Whig |
Robert James Tennent (1803 – 25 May 1880)[1] was an Irish Whig politician who, in the cause of reform, in 1832 contested Belfast's first competitive parliamentary election. Breaking the Tory hold on the town, he was eventually returned as a Member of Parliament from Belfast in 1847.
Born in Belfast and the son of Robert Tennent, medical doctor, merchant, and philanthropist,[2] and Eliza née Macrone, Tennent was educated at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution and in Trinity College Dublin.
Political career
In 1824, with his friend James Emerson, he volunteered to join the Greeks in their War of Independence. For Tennent, it was with conviction that having "learned too feelingly the black consequences of slavery by the wretched example of may own country", Ireland, he could not "remain a passive spectator of the conflict". He was soon disillusioned by the Greek insurgents, concluding that, beyond emancipation from the Turks, they had "no idea of true liberty".[3]
In 1832, the two friends contested Belfast's first competitive parliamentary election.[4][5] Emerson (who having married an heiress cousin of Tennent's, was now James Emerson Tennent) stood the interest of the town's proprietor, Lord Donegall, as an Independent Whig (but subsequently took the Tory Whip). In the cause of reform, Tennent stood as a Whig and lost.[6] A Protestant loyalist mob celebrated his defeat with an attack on the central Catholic district (Hercules Street) and with an attempt to ransack Tennent's house.[7]
In 1826 Tennent had been admitted to Lincoln's Inn. He was called to the Irish Bar In 1833 he was called to the Irish Bar and to the English Bar in 1834.[8]
Tennent succeeded in being elected a Whig Member of Parliament (MP) for Belfast at the 1847 general election and held the seat until 1852, when he was defeated again by a Tory.[9]