Edmund Haviland-Burke

Edmund Haviland-Burke (1864 31 August 1914) was a British politician.

The son of Edmund Haviland-Burke, Member of Parliament for Christchurch, and a descendent of Edmund Burke, Haviland-Burke was educated privately at various locations in Europe. He then joined the staff of the Manchester Guardian, for which he reported on the Greco-Turkish War.[1]

Haviland-Burke was an Irish nationalist, and a supporter of Charles Stewart Parnell. Settling in Dublin, he stood unsuccessfully for the Irish National League in North Kerry at the 1892 general election, South County Dublin in 1895, and North Louth at the 1900 general election. In that election, he also stood in Tullamore, where he finally took a seat. In Parliament, he served as a whip for the Irish Parliamentary Party. He held his seat in each subsequent election until his death in 1914.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Michael Stenton and Stephen Lees, Who's Who of British Members of Parliament, vol.2, p.163
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Joseph Francis Fox
Member of Parliament for Tullamore
1900 1914
Succeeded by
Edward John Graham
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