Background
Willans Nussey was the son of Thomas Nussey, a woollen manufacturer of Bramley Grange, Thorner near Leeds in the West Riding of Yorkshire. In 1897 he married Edith Daniel the daughter of a medical doctor from Fleetwood in Lancashire.
Willans Nussey was the son of Thomas Nussey, a woollen manufacturer of Bramley Grange, Thorner near Leeds in the West Riding of Yorkshire. In 1897 he married Edith Daniel the daughter of a medical doctor from Fleetwood in Lancashire.
He was educated at Malvern College until Christmas 1882, then attended Leamington College for boys and Trinity Hall, Cambridge.
At the time of the marriage the Daniels were residing in Scarborough and the wedding took place there. They had one son. Edith Nussey died in 1934 and Sir Willans married again in 1935. Nussey went in for the law and in 1893 he was called to the bar at the Inner Temple.
However he does not seem to have required an occupation to provide an income.
He started to engage in political activity as soon as he came down from university and MPs did not receive salaries until 1911. lieutenant seems likely that Nussey had access to family money to allow him to seek a career in politics.
He first stood for Parliament at the 1892 general election in the Maidstone division of Kent but in June 1893 there was a by-election in the Pontefract constituency in the West Riding of Yorkshire. The election of the sitting Liberal Member of Parliament for Pontefract, Harold James Reckitt at a by-election in February 1893, was declared void following an election petition and Nussey was selected to contest the seat.
In 1909, Nussey was created a baronet in the Birthday Honours list.
After stepping down from Parliament he in continued public life. He was a Justice of the Peace for the North Riding, chairman of the local bench, chairman of the North Yorkshire Quarter Sessions, chairman of the Appeals Committee and a Deputy Lieutenant of the North Riding. Nussey died at his home, Sutton Howgrave, Bedale in the North Riding of Yorkshire on 12 October 1947 aged exactly 79 years.
A collection of letters sent by Nussey’s to the Liberal prime minister, Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, has been deposited in the British Library manuscript collection.
Nussey held Liberal political views and was said to have remained faithful to the ideas and policies of William Ewart Gladstone all his life.
25th United Kingdom Parliament. 26th United Kingdom Parliament. 27th United Kingdom Parliament.
28th United Kingdom Parliament]
He was the Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) for Pontefract from 1893 to 1910.