Philip Bickerstaffe (1639–1714) was an English merchant and the owner of Amble Works.[1] He was M.P. for Berwick-upon-Tweed 1685;[2] and for Northumberland 1689-1698.[3] He descended from the family of Bickerstaffes, of Bickerstaffe, Lancashire.[4] Although he opposed the transfer of the Crown to the Prince of Orange in 1668-69, he was re-elected for the next parliament of 1669-90.
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He was known to be "a courtier of the Widdrington group but an unimpeachable Anglican" and a Clerk of His Majesty's Woodyard from about January 1669.[6][7][8]
Bickerstaffe was a free burgess of Newcastle, a member of one of the twelve mysteries of the same town, and was admitted to his personal freedom of the fellowship of Hostmen on 11 September 1684.[9]
On 15 November 1692, Bickerstaffe was said to have "claimed that the actions of three men in suing Sir Francis Bland in the court of Exchequer constituted a breach of privilege".[3]: 231
His parents were Howard Bickerstaffe of Chelsham and Elizabeth, while his brother was Sir Charles Bickerstaffe, Kt, Cup-bearer to Charles II.[10] He married Jane (d. 1694), the widow of John Clarke II, M.P. of Cockermouth. Through marriage, Bickerstaffe's seat became the newly built Chirton Hall in the 1670s.[3][11] Unable to meet various bonds, he lived in Fleet Prison, as reported in 1713.[1]
References
This article includes text incorporated from William Wardell Bean's "The parliamentary representation of the six northern counties of England: Cumberland, Durham, Lancashire, Northumberland, Westmoreland, and Yorkshire, and their cities and boroughs. From 1603, to the general election of 1886. With lists of members and biographical notices" (1890) and Reprints of rare tracts & imprints of ancient manuscripts, &c: chiefly illustrative of the history of the northern counties (1849), publications now in the public domain.