Hall, whose father was three times mayor of Berwick, came from a family settled there since at least the early 18th century. In the 1780s he was a landing surveyor in the port of London and when he joined the Whig Club on 15 Jan. 1788 his address was the Custom House. By 1792 he had moved to Stotford Hall, Northumberland, and between 1792 and 1799 seceded from the Club. He was active in Berwick politics in the 1790s, raised four companies of volunteers and in 1799 instigated a public campaign to promote his own candidature as a third man in opposition to the established interests of the Delaval family and Sir John Callander, who described him as ‘my confidential friend, a person to whom I trusted the entire management of all my political business there’.
Doubts were expressed as to Hall’s ability to stay the course in so expensive a constituency, and one of Delaval’s agents suspected that a canvassing journey to London in April 1801 was merely a pretext ‘to try to find a nabob to take the burden off his own shoulders which by this time, I presume, he finds is far too heavy for him to bear’.
