Like his father, Evelyn John Shirley (1788-1856), who sat for county Monaghan, 1826-31 and South Warwickshire 1836-49, Shirley was a firm Conservative and Protestant whose parliamentary activity was largely confined to the division lobby. The Shirleys were a junior branch descended from the 1st earl Ferrers, and in addition to their ancient Warwickshire seat of Eatington Park, owned over 26,000 acres in county Monaghan in Ireland, which they had inherited from the Devereaux family, earls of Essex in the mid-seventeenth century.
The family’s extensive landholdings made Shirley’s return for county Monaghan a ‘certainty’ at the 1841 general election, when he met no opposition.
A combustible combination of demographic pressure, long-standing mismanagement, high rents and his father’s hard-line with tenants and general habit of ‘making a profit on every trifling transaction’, resulted in widespread unrest on the family’s Monaghan estate in 1843.
Shirley’s second stint in Parliament, after his unopposed return for South Warwickshire at a by-election in December 1853, followed much the same pattern as before. He supported the maintenance of church rates and Anglican oaths and tests at Oxford and Cambridge, as well as Spooner’s attempts to end the endowment of the Catholic seminary at Maynooth. He maintained his silence in debate and voted in under a fifth of divisions in 1856.
Shirley, who had succeeded his father in 1856, retired at the 1865 general election wishing to spend more time on this Irish estate.
