Gervase Parker Bushe | |
---|---|
Member of parliament for Granard | |
In office 1767–1776 | |
Preceded by | Edmond Malone |
Succeeded by | Thomas Maunsell |
High Sheriff of County Kilkenny | |
In office 1767–1776 | |
Preceded by | John Greene of Greeneville |
Member of Parliament for Kilkenny City | |
In office 1778–1783 | |
Preceded by | Charles Agar |
Succeeded by | William Cuffe |
Member of Parliament for Fore | |
In office 1778–1783 | |
Preceded by | James FitzGerald |
Succeeded by | Stephen Francis William Fremantle |
Member of Parliament for Lanesborough | |
In office 1790–1793 | |
Preceded by | Robert Dillon |
Succeeded by | Edmond Stanley |
Personal details | |
Born | bapt. Dublin, Ireland | 22 December 1744
Died | 12 August 1793 Kilfane, County Kilkenny, Ireland | (aged 48)
Alma mater | Christ Church, Oxford |
Gervase Parker Bushe (1744 – 13 August 1793) was an Irish landowner and MP.
He was the son of Amyas Bushe of Dublin and his wife Elizabeth Parker. He was educated at Christ Church, Oxford (where he matriculated in 1763)[1] and at Trinity College Dublin (where he graduated BA, LLB and LLD). He became a lawyer and lived at Kilfane in County Kilkenny.[2]
He served as an MP in the Parliament of Ireland for Granard from 1767 to 1776, for Kilkenny City from 1778 to 1783, for Fore from 1783 to 1790 and for Lanesborough from 1790 to 1793.[3] He was appointed High Sheriff of County Kilkenny for 1768-69.[4]
He was a member of the Royal Irish Academy. In a paper presented to the Academy in 1789 he calculated the population of Ireland as approximately 4 million.[5]
He died in August 1793 at Kilfane. He had married Mary Grattan, the daughter of James Grattan, the Recorder of Dublin and MP for Dublin City and the sister of Henry Grattan, the anti-union MP. They had 10 children.