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・ Bobby Vardaro
・ Bobby Vaughn
・ Bobby Vaughn (designer)
・ Bobby Veach
・ Bobby Veck
・ Bobby Schwartz
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・ Bobby Scott (Australian footballer)
・ Bobby Scott (musician)
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Bobby Shafto
・ Bobby Shafto's Gone to Sea
・ Bobby Shaftoe
・ Bobby Shane
・ Bobby Shantz
・ Bobby Sharp
・ Bobby Shaw
・ Bobby Shearer
・ Bobby Sheehan
・ Bobby Sheehan (ice hockey)
・ Bobby Sheehan (musician)
・ Bobby Sheen
・ Bobby Sheng
・ Bobby Shepherd
・ Bobby Sherman


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Bobby Shafto : ウィキペディア英語版
Bobby Shafto

Robert Shafto (sometimes spelt Shaftoe) (circa 1732 – November 1797) was an 18th-century British Member of Parliament (MP), who was the likeliest subject of a famous North East English folk song (Roud #1359) and nursery rhyme "Bobby Shafto's Gone to Sea".
==Biography==
Robert Shafto was born around 1732〔The date of his birth appears to be contradictory from a number of sources. (Whitworth Hall ) claims it to be 1730, but the majority claim 1732.〕 at his family seat of Whitworth near Spennymoor in County Durham. He was educated at Westminster School, London from 1740 to 1749, when he entered Balliol College, Oxford.〔Jessica Kilburn, 'Shafto, Robert (c.1732–1797)' ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004).〕
He succeeded to the family estate on the death of his father John in 1742.〔 Both his father and uncle Robert Shafto had been Tory Members of Parliament (MPs).〔(North Eastern surnames website ), URL accessed 30 September 2006〕 He continued this tradition becoming MP for County Durham in 1760, using his nickname "Bonny Bobby Shafto" and the now famous song for electioneering purposes, defeating the Whig Sir Thomas Clavering, with a campaign supported by Henry Vane, first earl of Darlington, Thomas Pelham-Holles, duke of Newcastle and the bishop of Durham.〔 However, once in parliament he dropped this allegiance, supporting the administrations of John Stuart, 3rd earl of Bute and Pitt the elder. He held the Durham seat for two parliaments until he declined to stand in the election of 1768.〔
Shafto married Anne Duncombe (died 1783), daughter and heir of Thomas Duncombe of Duncombe Park, Yorkshire, on 18 April 1774. Shafto and his wife had three children, John (1775–1802), Robert (1776–1848), and Thomas (born 1777). His wife, Anne, had inherited property in the borough of Downton in Wiltshire and he became its MP in 1780.〔 He is known to have supported William Pitt the Younger during the regency crisis of 1788–9.〔 He did not seek re-election in 1790. Robert Shafto died in November 1797, and is buried in the Shafto family crypt beneath the floor of Whitworth Church.〔

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