Cust, ‘a student of the classics with literary and refined tastes’,
As under the present circumstances it must doubtless be acceptable to you to know the political opinions of Members of Parliament, I do myself the honour of waiting on you for the purpose of introducing to you my son, Mr Cust, who is constant in his attendance on parliamentary business; and at the same time to acquaint you that you may rely on the support of him and myself to the general measures of your administration ... this line of conduct is in strict conformity with that which I pursued during your late administration.
PRO, Dacres Adams mss 5/50.
Cust duly supported Pitt’s second ministry and voted against the censure of Melville, 8 Apr. 1805; but when his father wrote to the minister two months later soliciting a step in the peerage and a promise of the succession to the lord lieutenancy of Lincolnshire, he was still seeking an opportunity of ‘introducing to you my eldest son who is in Parliament but, I believe, has not the honour of being personally known to you’.
Cust voted against the Grenville ministry’s repeal of Pitt’s Additional Force Act, 30 Apr. 1806, but on 17 May he apparently joined Brooks’s Club. From June until November he was on militia duty in Huntingdonshire.
A call of the House summoned me hither ‘invita Minerva’ last Monday, but as I sat near a fortnight on the election committee about a month ago, I shall not another, and I have therefore got leave of absence for a fortnight on urgent private business, or in plainer terms, for the sake of fox-hunting.
Sun, 18 Feb. 1807; CJ, lxii. 194; A. L. Wherry, Chrons. Erthig, ii. 289-90.
He was removed from the Commons at the end of the year by the death of his father, whom the Portland ministry had regarded as ‘doubtful’ on their accession to power.
He obtained the lord lieutenancy in 1809 and successfully applied to Lord Liverpool for promotion in the peerage in 1815, claiming that ‘no one has been a more steady and zealous friend to your lordship’s administration, and in carrying into execution the measures of government’, particularly those relating to the militia.
