Hamilton owed his place in the Prince of Wales’s household to the influence of his sister, Lady Archibald Hamilton, the Prince’s mistress. Returned for a Cornish borough by Lord Falmouth in 1741, he voted with the Opposition till Walpole’s fall, after which, with the rest of the Prince’s servants, he supported the Government. The only member of the former Opposition to be included in the ministerial list of candidates for a proposed public accounts commission in May 1742, he was put down under ‘Winnington’, not ‘Prince of Wales’, in the Cockpit lists drawn up in October by Pelham, who next year appointed him receiver general of Minorca. He spoke against dismissing the Hanoverians on 6 Dec. 1743.
In 1747 Hamilton, not having been re-nominated by Lord Falmouth, made an attempt to get himself returned as a government supporter for Bishop’s Castle, resigning his Minorca post, which had been made inconsistent with a seat in the House by the Place Act of 1742, but resuming it after failing to be elected.
one of my patriarchs of modern gardening has been killed by Anstey; author of The Bath Guide. Mr. Hamilton, who has built a house in the Crescent, was also at eighty-three eager in planting a new garden, and wanted some acres, which Anstey, his neighbour, not so ancient, destined to the same use. Hamilton wrote a warm letter on their being refused; and Anstey, who does not hate a squabble in print, as he has more than once shown, discharged shaft upon shaft against the poor veteran [who] ... died of the volley.
To Lady Upper Ossory, 28 Sept. 1786.
