Sir Robert Kemp, 3rd Baronet

Sir Robert Kemp, 3rd Baronet (1667–1734), of Hoxne and Ubbeston, Suffolk, was an English landowner and Tory politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1701 and 1734.

[1] Kemp was returned unopposed as Member of Parliament for Dunwich on the family interest at the first general election of 1701 with his Tory brother-in-law Sir Charles Blois, Bt.

His mother died in 1705 and he did not stand at the 1705 English general election and left Hoxne to live with his father at Ubbeston.

He stood again with Blois at the 1708 British general election at Dunwich and defeated two Whigs, but they were unseated on petition on 5 February 1709.

He was returned unopposed at Dunwich at the 1713 British general election, but lost the seat at the 1715 British general election[4] In 1727 Kemp's third wife Martha died and he married as his fourth wife Amy Burroughs, widow of John Burrough of Ipswich, daughter of Richard Phillips on 9 July 1728.