Kibblewhite’s story is that of the village boy who ‘made good’.
Kibblewhite served his apprenticeship as a solicitor’s clerk in Swindon: he later mercilessly lampooned his employer Bradford. He subsequently moved to London, was articled to John Meakings in the Strand and in 1797, being admitted attorney, set up in business at Gray’s Inn, practising in King’s bench and common pleas. He was involved in an acrimonious dispute with Lord Hardwicke, 1797-8, as a collector of manorial quit-rents.
In 1807, to quote Oldfield: ‘Mr Kibblewhite opposed the united interest of the Lords [Clarendon and Bolingbroke] and procured the return of two Members’. This triumph for ‘independence’ was secured by the erection of 108 houses on property adjoining his own which he had purchased for £4,000 from the Earl of Shaftesbury and possibly from Bolingbroke; by ousting five of the corporation in favour of his brother and friends; and by bribery.
Kibblewhite did not try to re-enter Parliament and his later years were devoted to the affairs of the life assurance company of which he was a founder-director and later chairman. He retired first to 9 Langham Place, then to West End, Hampstead, where he died of apoplexy 3 Nov. 1845, aged 75, a widower without children, worth £60,000.
