Dalrymple, a half-pay army veteran who had been appointed an aide-de-camp to William IV, 22 July 1830, was the first resident of 5 Brunswick Terrace, a fashionable seafront development adjoining Brighton, where his regiment was based. From 1830 he was one of the new township’s commissioners.
How comes it then that Sir A. Dalrymple, a Tory to the backbone, a Member of the old corrupt Parliaments, formerly a representative of a rotten borough, the enemy of all reforms, the supporter of all abuses, the apologist of that system of oppression, plunder and corruption that has so long existed; how comes it then that we find this gentleman polling more votes than either the sham or the real Radical?
A series of reports parodying Dalrymple’s speeches at local meetings ensued, in which he was accused of bribery and intimidation and credited with an income exceeding £50,000 per year.
Dalrymple featured regularly in court circulars as a dinner guest at Brighton Pavillion throughout 1835-6.
A regular presence in the division lobbies (and an assidious one from 1837-8), Dalrymple voted with the Conservative opposition to the Melbourne ministry on most major issues, including Irish municipal reform, revision of the corn laws, the new poor law and colonial matters. He occasionally rallied to government on the civil list.
Dalrymple spoke steadily against Russell’s poor law amendment bill that year and attended a ‘Great Conservative Demonstration’ at Lewes on the issue (and its ensuing dinner) in April 1840.
At the ensuing election he was ‘considered quite safe’ by the press, who surmised that his ‘manly and determined opposition to the poor law’ had ‘procured for him the warmest support among the constituency’ and ‘many of the Chartists’.
