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282:. Although he originally owed the seat to his wife's family interest, he was informed by Thomas Lamb, manager of the borough on 11 June: "We should hope it will not be very displeasing to you to retire when the politics of the times run so contrary to your own; to attempt to accomplish your wishes soon with the assurances of your giving your support to government I found would be very hardly combated." Dickinson's offered to come in as locum tenens for his Lamb's son Thomas Phillipps Lamb but this was rejected. Dickinson wrote that he would retire into private life as he could not represent Rye, bearing his "great disappointment" with "the most perfect resignation and good humour". He also wrote to the
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that, as a victim of his loyalty to him, he had "a prior claim to anyone to regain that very seat ... or such other as I may approve of". To "his Royal
Highness" he wrote that his being thrown out was a measure forced on his constituents and that he had ‘no doubt at a future opportunity of being
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271:, Somerset where he built his new house in the Georgian style between 1785 and 1788 under the supervision of Samuel Heal of Bridgwater. He was also left a share of the Appleton estate in Jamaica which had been granted to the Dickinson family by Charles II.
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Born on 13 July 1745, Dickinson was the eldest son of Sarah (née
Prankard), daughter of Graffin Prankard, iron merchant, of Bristol and Caleb Dickinson, merchant, of Bristol. He was probably educated at
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congratulated him on not endangering a "constitution so sensible to fatigue". When another vacancy arose on Coxe's death in 1795, Dickinson was again a contender, but made way for
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In
January 1771, he married Philippa Fuller, daughter of Stephen Fuller of Brightling, Sussex and Jamaica. They had at least a son and a daughter. Dickinson died on 26 May 1806.
248:. This was a period in which the West Indies commercial lobby, to which Dickinson belonged as did some of his Fuller relations by marriage, was growing; and was able to head off
244:, a Treasury borough, and Dickinson re-entered Parliament as MP for Rye in a by-election on 20 May 1777 succeeding Rose Fuller. He was returned unopposed for Rye in
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The
Formation of a Commercial Lobby: The West India Interest, British Colonial Policy and the American Revolution
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was returned for
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he was able to come in quietly for the county. His son and heir
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Kingweston House, Somerset - now part of
Millfield School
365:"DICKINSON, William I (1745-1806), of Kingweston, Som"
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367:. History of Parliament Online
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