Sir William Chapple, a distinguished lawyer of a Dorset family, was cousin and executor of Governor Thomas Pitt.
with so much heat in favour of the commissioners and purchasers both, and against bills of this sort on any occasion, as gave a bad impression of his parts, and the Speaker [Onslow] could not but smile, though his friend.
HMC Egmont Diary, i. 261.
He vacated his seat in 1737 on appointment as a high court judge. Before the 1741 election in Surrey Sir Henry Vincent wrote to Walpole that ‘Sir William Chapple ... is inclinable ... to serve Lord Baltimore unless fixed by you in my interest.’
