William Tyrwhitt

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William Tyrwhitt (died 1591) was an English landowner and politician who sat as Member of Parliament (MP) for Huntingdon in March 1553 but took no further part in public life under Queen Elizabeth I because of his Roman Catholicism, for which he underwent spells of imprisonment.[1]

Born by 1531, he was the eldest son of the MP Sir Robert Tyrwhitt, of Kettleby in Lincolnshire, and his wife Elizabeth (died 1590), daughter of Sir Thomas Oxenbridge, of Etchingham in Sussex.[2] With centuries of service in local and national government, his family was long established in Lincolnshire and well connected,[1] his sister Ursula having married Edmund Sheffield, 1st Earl of Mulgrave.[2][3]

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