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  1. Lord Arthur Pelham-Clinton (23 June 1840 – 18 June 1870), known as Lord Arthur Clinton, was an English aristocrat and Liberal Party politician. A member of Parliament (MP) for three years, he was notorious for involvement in the homosexual scandal and trial of Boulton and Park.

  2. Lord Arthur Pelham-Clinton (23 June 1840 – 18 June 1870) was an English aristocrat and Liberal Party politician. He was the third son of Henry Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle and Lady Susan Harriet Catherine Hamilton.

  3. 8 de jun. de 2016 · Then – brace yourself! – there was Lady Stella Pelham Clinton, who lived as the wife of a Tory MP named Lord Arthur Pelham Clinton, sharing a bed with him in a flat just off the Strand.

  4. There was also Lord Arthur Clinton, who wrote love letters to Stella Bolton but unfortunately had died before trial. While under arrest, Fanny and Stella were both forced to undress and be...

  5. The court also indicted other members of their party the night of their arrest as well as Boulton’s lover, Lord Arthur Clinton. The son of a duke and a member of Parliament, Clinton died the day after he received his indictment: although his official cause of death was scarlet fever, there is speculation that his wealth and power allowed him ...

  6. 29 de mai. de 2020 · Three more had absconded – Martin Cumming, William Somerville and C.H. Thompson – meanwhile, another had died, the aristocrat Lord Arthur Clinton, whose love-letters to Ernest Boulton had been discovered by law enforcement. Clinton reportedly died from natural causes, but suicide has always been largely suspected.

  7. mer MP, Lord Arthur Clinton, third son of the Duke of Newcastle, who had played husband to Boulton both onstage and off—a stationer testified to having printed up cards for "Lady Arthur Clinton" (PMG 30/5/1870). Boulton and Park are now, almost a century and a half later, celebrities in gay history books,