He was the eldest son of Ingram Rider of Leeds, Yorkshire and educated at Charterhouse School (1776) and University College, Oxford (1783).
[1] He was elected at the 1831 general election as a member of parliament (MP) for Kent,[2][3] and held the seat until the constituency was divided under the Reform Act 1832.
[2] At the 1837 general election he contested the Eastern division of Kent,[5] but failed to unseat either of the two sitting Conservative Party MPs.
He had married Mary Ann Elizabeth Pinnock, but had no children.
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