Sir Robert Stickney Blaine (30 January 1816 – 15 December 1897) was a leading Conservative politician in the English City of Bath, who was mainly involved in local politics, but sat in the House of Commons from 1885 to 1886.
However, he found the duties of the office burdensome, and took the opportunity to retire from the House of Commons when a further election was held in 1886, returning to local politics.
[1][2][3][4] Following her death he married Lydia Letitia Purvis, daughter of the late Sir Timothy Vansittart Stonhouse, 14th Baronet.
[5] In his later years he suffered from ill health, and travelled to Cannes in the south of France on medical advice.
This article about a Conservative Member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom representing an English constituency and born in the 1810s is a stub.