biography text

Trelawny, like so many of his family, became an army officer. He was returned for West Looe at the general election of 1685 as a Tory on the interest of his eldest brother, the bishop of Bristol, but left no trace on the records of James II’s Parliament. In 1688 he was recorded as absent from the questions on the Test Act and Penal Laws, but Sunderland ordered him to stand as court candidate for West Looe. He followed his brother Charles, under whom he was serving, in joining the Prince of Orange in November. In the Convention he represented East Looe as a court Tory, but his name is mentioned only on 12 Mar. 1689, when he was given leave to go into the country. He was a Tory under William III, but signed the Association in 1696. He died on 8 Jan. 1702, and was buried at Plymouth. His son succeeded as fifth baronet, and a grandson sat for West Looe from 1757 to 1767.Boase and Courtney, Bibl. Cornub. ii. 767; CSP Dom. 1687-9, p. 276.

Author
Parliamentarian
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