Abraham Laverton

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Abraham Laverton
Member of Parliament
for Westbury
In office
February 1874 – April 1880
Preceded by Charles Paul Phipps
Succeeded by Charles Nicholas Paul Phipps
Personal details
Born 1819
Died 1886
Nationality British
Political party Liberal
Occupation Cloth mill owner

Abraham Laverton (1819–1886), of Westbury, Wiltshire, was a cloth mill owner, philanthropist, and Liberal member of parliament for the parliamentary borough of Westbury from 1874 to 1880.

Mill owner and philanthropist

In 1849, Laverton leased the Angel Mill, Westbury, from the trustees of William Matravers and converted it to produce cloth. In 1852 he bought the mill, while in the same year James Wilson, the Whig Member of Parliament for Westbury and his brother William bought Bitham Mill in the same town. In 1856, the Wilson brothers sold their mill to Laverton. For part of the middle of the 19th century he also owned Boyer's Mill, Westbury. As well as being a manufacturer, Laverton was also a speculative buyer of cloth and wool.[1]

In 1869, he built Prospect Square, Westbury, a development of thirty-nine houses, of which thirty-two were homes for his mill workers and seven were almshouses, around three sides of a large open space which was originally used as allotments.[2][3]

In 1873, he founded and built the Laverton Institute in Bratton Road, Westbury, as a recreational centre.[3][4] This included a room for a school which already existed and which soon moved into other premises. In 1884, Laverton also built a new school in Bratton Road, near the Laverton Institute, and presented it to the town. This was associated with the British Society and opened its doors in 1885 with 73 children. In 1907, the Westbury British Boys School changed its name to the Westbury Laverton Institute School and later to the Laverton County Infants' School.[5][6]

The great west window of Westbury's All Saints parish church was donated by Abraham Laverton.[7]

He is sometimes stated as the founder of the public baths in Church Street, Westbury. While these were his conception, they were completed and given to the town in 1887, shortly after Laverton's death, by his nephew William Henry Laverton.[3]

The firm Laverton founded, called A. Laverton & Co. Ltd., was still making cloth in Westbury in his Angel and Bitham Mills in the 1960s.[1]

Politician

Laverton became a Westbury Justice of the Peace, and in 1864 a dispute arose between him and Charles Paul Phipps as to their seniority as magistrates.[8]

In 1866, he was named as an additional Commissioner "for executing the Acts for granting a Land Tax and other Rates and Taxes", when he was described as "Abraham Laverton Esquire, Westbury House, Westbury".[9]

From 1868, Laverton stood unsuccessfully for parliament in Westbury as a Liberal, first against the Conservative John Lewis Phipps, when he lost by only twenty-seven votes. Although Phipps was elected, the result was declared void as a result of an election petition brought by Laverton. Mr Justice Willes found that, although Phipps himself was personally innocent of any corrupt practice, his agent, Harrop, had carried out acts of intimidation on voters.[10] The Judge found that Harrop, who was an agent of Phipps and a manufacturer in Westbury, "had told his workmen that no man should remain in his employment who voted for the Petitioner, who was his rival in trade, and that these men or some of them were obliged to leave his employment in consequence of their refusing to abstain from so voting".[11] A by-election was thus held in 1869, at which Laverton lost by only eleven votes, defeated by his rival's brother, Charles Paul Phipps, standing for the Conservatives. At the 1874 election he was finally elected as the borough's Member of Parliament, but he was defeated at the 1880 election by yet another Phipps, Charles Nicholas Paul Phipps.[12]

In 1874, a poem called Warblings from Westbury was published, poking fun at Laverton in his new role as Member of Parliament.[13] In the same year, he printed a circular to the shareholders of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway offering himself to them as a director.[14]

Following his defeat in 1880, Laverton filed a petition to have the result of the election annulled on the grounds of bribery, treating and undue influence on the part of his Conservative opponent Charles Nicholas Paul Phipps, but this failed, being rejected by Sir Robert Lush, and Sir Henry Manisty, Judges of the High Court of Justice.[15]

He died in 1886.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 'Westbury: Mills', in A History of the County of Wiltshire: Volume 8: Warminster, Westbury and Whorwellsdown Hundreds (1965), pp. 172-175, online text at british-history.ac.uk
  2. Prospect Square, Westbury at geograph.org.uk
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Timeline at wiltshire.gov.uk
  4. £350k revamp plan to bring Laverton to life, 8 September 2006, online at salisburyjournal.co.uk
  5. Westbury - Laverton County Infants School, Westbury, at wiltshire.gov.uk
  6. 'Westbury: Schools', in A History of the County of Wiltshire: Volume 8: Warminster, Westbury and Whorwellsdown Hundreds (1965), pp. 188-191, online text at british-history.ac.uk
  7. Westbury, Wiltshire at web.ukonline.co.uk
  8. Wiltshire and Swindon Archives, ref. no. 540/297 at history.wiltshire.gov.uk
  9. An Act to appoint additional Commissioners for executing the Acts for granting a Land Tax and other Rates and Taxes at londonancestor.com
  10. Law Times Reports relating to Magistrates, Municipal, Parichial, Ecclesiastical and Election Law, vol.5, 1870
  11. Reports of the Decisions of the Judges for the Trial of Election Petitions, full text online at archive.org
  12. Mr Abraham Laverton at hansard.millbanksystems.com
  13. Wiltshire and Swindon Archives, ref no. 540/302 at history.wiltshire.gov.uk
  14. Wiltshire and Swindon Archives, ref no. 540/323 at history.wiltshire.gov.uk
  15. Westbury Election (House of Commons Debate 22 June 1880, vol. 253, cc. 534-5) at hansard.millbanksystems.com
  • B. Little, A history of the firm of A. Laverton & Co. Ltd. (unpublished)

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Westbury
18741880
Succeeded by
Charles Nicholas Paul Phipps