John Thurlow Brace

John Thurloe Brace (born c. 1685) of Astwood, Buckinghamshire was a British landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1715 and 1728.

He was educated at Bedford School and was admitted at Trinity College, Cambridge on 8 January 1702, aged 16.

[2] Brace, was returned as a Whig Member of Parliament for Bedford at the 1715 general election and voted with the Administration in all recorded divisions.

At the 1727 general election Brace was re-elected, but there was a petition and he stood down on 16 April 1728 under a compromise.

William Cole, the antiquary, said of him ‘lived a loose kind of life and run out his estate; but he was a man of parts and ingenuity’.