Robert Myddelton Biddulph (1761–1814)

[1] His elder sister, Anne Biddulph, was the wife of David Gordon, 14th of Abergeldie.

[3] He served as Recorder of Denbigh from 1795 to 1796, then entered politics under the patronage of the Whig Duke of Norfolk.

He became a member of Brooks's on 26 April 1796, and was an unsuccessful candidate for Leominster before being elected to the House of Commons for Herefordshire the same year, replacing Sir George Cornewall.

In the 1802 general election Myddelton Biddulph was defeated by Cornewall and left Parliament, but resumed the office of Recorder of Denbigh (which he held until his death) and became a common councilman of the borough.

[1] In his second time in Parliament Myddelton Biddulph sat as an independent, in opposition to the government.

Chirk Castle