William Horsemonden-Turner

He was defeated in 1741, after which he took advantage of the dissolution of the Maidstone corporation to secure from the Lord Chancellor a new charter favourable to the popular party.

[2] According to a note by Frederick, Prince of Wales, in Lord Egmont's electoral survey c. 1750, Turner was governed by John Scrope of the Treasury.

[2] On 25 May 1725, Horsemonden-Turner married the 76 year-old brewery heiress Elizabeth (née Kenward) Ward Bliss (died 1730), a daughter of John Kenward of Yalding and the widow of both Ambrose Ward of Yalding and Thomas Bliss, MP of Maidstone.

Per Horsemonden-Turner's will, Stede Hall and the rest of his estates were inherited by Charles Booth, Esq.

This article about a Member of the Parliament of Great Britain (1707–1800) representing an English constituency is a stub.