Nathaniel Booth, 4th Baron Delamer (9 June 1709 – 9 January 1770) was an English peer who served as Chairman of Committees in the House of Lords from 1765.
[1] The 6th and eldest surviving son of Dr Robert Booth, Dean of Bristol, he succeeded in the family titles as Baron Delamer and a baronet upon the death in 1758 of his cousin George, Earl of Warrington, being a patrilineal descendant of the 1st Baron Delamer but not of the 1st Earl of Warrington; the Dunham Massey estates were left to the Earls of Stamford via Lady Mary Booth's marriage.
[2] In 1743, Nathaniel Booth married Margaret, daughter of Richard Jones, of Ramsbury Manor, Wiltshire.
Lord and Lady Delamer lived in London at Cavendish Square and at Burgh House, Hampstead;[3] they had two sons, both of whom died young, and a daughter, Elizabeth, who died unmarried in 1765.
1661) became extinct whilst the baronetcy was inherited by his second cousin and heir male, the Revd Sir George Booth, Rector of Ashton-under-Lyne, who was seated at Cotterstock Hall, Northamptonshire.