William Philip Price (1817 – 31 March 1891) was an English timber merchant and Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons in two periods between 1852 and 1873.
[2] In 1840 he became a director of the Gloucester Banking Company, and was later made the chairman in 1865.
In 1857 his re-election was investigated for bribery, and it was found that his agents had been bribing voters, although he himself was not aware of it.
[4] Price was re-elected MP for Gloucester in the 1865 general election, but left parliament in May 1873 to become a railway commissioner.
Their son William Edwin Price was MP for Tewkesbury.