Danvers was a Leicestershire country gentleman, whose family had been settled at Swithland since the fifteenth century. He was originally brought into Parliament by the Duke of Newcastle at the request of Lord Sunderland, who had been asked by the Duke of Rutland to find him a seat, apparently in return for his having stood down at the county election in favour of the Duke’s brother, Lord William Manners.
Danvers was a frequent speaker, belonging to the group of independent Members who supported Walpole, but sometimes went against him. In his first Parliament he spoke against the vote of credit on 12 Apr. 1727, but in the debate of 3 July on the new King’s civil list, after Shippen had pronounced ‘a funeral oration’ on the ministry, Danvers foretold ‘a resurrection of the just’.
Edward Harley describes him in 1737 as ‘a dull joker’.
