Thomas Ingram (Royalist)

Sir Thomas Ingram (1614 – 13 February 1672) was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons in two periods between 1640 and 1672.

Ingram was the son of Sir Arthur Ingram of Temple Newsam, Yorkshire and his second wife Alice, daughter of William Ferrers (or Ferrars), mercer of London, and widow of John Holliday (1582–1610), son of Sir Leonard Holliday, former Lord Mayor of London.

He was commissioner of array for the King in Yorkshire in 1642 and was disabled from sitting in parliament on 2 September 1642.

[2] Ingram sent £1,000 to the exiled court in June 1659, and took part in negotiations with the leading Presbyterians just before the Restoration.

In August 1660 he became Deputy Lieutenant for the North Riding of Yorkshire until 1661 and a commissioner for assessment for Middlesex.