James Aspinall (22 June 1795 – 15 February 1861) was a Church of England clergyman and miscellaneous writer.
[1] In 1831, Aspinall was the joint incumbent of the Church of St Luke, Liverpool, where he preached a remarkable sermon, "The Crisis, or the Signs of the Times with regard to the Church of England".
[2] On 26 January 1844, he delivered an address at the major free trade meeting held at Hull, at which John Bright and Richard Cobden both spoke.
Aspinall was domestic chaplain for more than thirty years to Baron Clonbrock, and was a clerical Justice of the Peace for Lindsey.
She was the daughter of William Charles Lake (died 1836), from South Carolina, an estate owner in Jamaica and merchant in Liverpool, and his wife with the surname Orange, of Norfolk, Virginia.