Thomas Geers Winford

Thomas Geers Winford (c.1697–1753), of Bridge Sollers, near Hereford, and Glasshampton, Worcestershire was a British lawyer and Tory politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1727 and 1748.

[2] Geers was returned as a Tory Member of Parliament for Hereford on a compromise at the 1727 British general election.

On 4 February 1730, he moved unsuccessfully for a vote of thanks to Dr. Samuel Croxall for his sermon preached at St. Margaret's, Westminster on the anniversary of the beheading of Charles I.

This was based on the text "take the wicked from before the King and His throne shall be established as righteousness" and intended as an allusion to Walpole.

At the 1747 British general election he was returned in a contest for Worcester but was unseated on petition on 11 February 1748.