Background
Warr was the third son of Rev George Winter Warr, a Church of England vicar of Street Saviour"s Church in Liverpool and the Canon of Liverpool from 1880 until his death in 1895.
Warr was the third son of Rev George Winter Warr, a Church of England vicar of Street Saviour"s Church in Liverpool and the Canon of Liverpool from 1880 until his death in 1895.
He sat in the House of Commons from 1895 to 1902. He was educated at the Royal Institution School in Liverpool, and qualified as a solicitor in 1870. Warr specialised in commercial law, on which he became an established authority.
He was elected as a Liverpool City Councillor in November 1894.
Warr was selected as the Conservative candidate for the resulting by-election, and was returned unopposed. He was re-elected unopposed at the general election in 1900, but found that the increasing workload of Parliament was incompatible with his legal work in Liverpool his wife"s long-term illness.
He resigned his seat on 27 October 1902 by the procedural device of accepting appointment as Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds, triggering another by-election. Warr died suddenly at the age of 60 on 24 March 1908, after returning home from business.
26th United Kingdom Parliament. 27th United Kingdom Parliament]
The Conservative Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) Baron Henry de Worms was ennobled in November 1895, giving him a seat and the House of Lords and creating a vacancy in his Commons seat, the East Toxteth division of Liverpool.