Nicholas Kendall (Conservative politician)

Nicholas Kendall (22 December 1800 – 8 June 1878)[1] was born in St Mabyn, Cornwall.

[3] In 1858 he was chairman of the River Thames Select Committee during The Great Stink[4] The son of a vicar, Nicholas Kendall was a member of a Cornish landowning family.

He was returned to parliament for East Cornwall, in conjunction with Thomas Agar-Robartes, in 1852, which position he retained without intermission until 1868.

Mr Kendall was one of the county magistrates and also a deputy-lieutenant, and deputy warden of the Stannaries.

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Coat of arms of the Kendall family of Pelyn in Cornwall.