Henry Heneage St Paul (16 March 1777 – 1 November 1820)[1] was an English officer in the British Army and a politician.
His father held the title of Count St Paul of the Austrian Empire.
[2] Educated at Eton, he was commissioned as an ensign in the 60th Foot in 1802, but preferred managing his father's estates and was on half-pay from the army by 1803.
[4] At the 1820 general election he was defeated by Sir David Milne, but that result was reversed on petition in July 1820,[1] and St Paul was re-elected later the same month[1][5] without a contest.
[2] His death triggered a by-election which was contested by the Scottish Tory nabob James Balfour and the Whig baronet Sir Francis Blake.