Background
William was the son of John Brocklehurst and Mary Coare.
Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom
William was the son of John Brocklehurst and Mary Coare.
He sat in the House of Commons from 1868 to 1880 and from 1885 to 1886. However, the result of the 1880 general election in Macclesfield was declared void on 22 June 1880, after an election petition. Brocklehurst and his fellow Member of Parliament David Chadwick were both unseated, and a Royal Commission was appointed which found that there had been extensive bribery in the borough.
The writ was suspended, and the borough lost its right to representation in Parliament.
Out of Parliament, Brocklehurst served as Mayor of Macclesfield from 1883 to 1885. The Redistribution of Seats Acting 1885 abolished the parliamentary borough of Macclesfield, but created a new single-seat county division of Cheshire, which bore the same name but covered a wider area.
Brocklehurst was elected at the 1885 general election as the first Member of Parliament for the new division, but did not stand again at the 1885 general election. The Brocklehurst family of Brocklehurst-Whiston mill acquired Butley Hall in 1861, and the Bollingtonfield Estate in 1884, naming it Butley Cottage.
lieutenant is currently a hotel known as White House Manor.
Brocklehurst was a Justice of the Peace for Cheshire, and in 1870 he was president of the Macclesfield Chamber of Commerce. In 1895 the Macclesfield High School for Girls was established in a building bought from Brocklehurst. He died in June 1900, the 18 August 1900 edition of "The Nursing Record & Hospital World" records that he left £1000 to the endowment fund of Macclesfield Infirmary.
He also left £1500 to the High School for Girls.
20th United Kingdom Parliament. 21st United Kingdom Parliament. 22nd United Kingdom Parliament.
23rd United Kingdom Parliament]
He was elected at the 1868 general election as one of the two Members of Parliament (MPs) for the borough of Macclesfield, where he was re-elected in 1874 and 1880.