Remembered for ‘his elegance of speech and dignity of character, which he carried with the grace of a true aristocrat, combined with the soft feelings of a perfect old English gentleman’, Hamilton’s service as Conservative MP for the notoriously venal borough of Sudbury owed its brevity not to his use of corrupt practices, but his determination to resist them.
Born in Londonderry, Ireland, Hamilton was the only son of Sir John Hamilton (1755-1835), whose distinguished army career, during which he rose to the rank of lieutenant-general, had earned him a baronetcy in 1814.
Offering for Sudbury in 1837, Hamilton cited his loyalty to the crown and the established Church, and his wish to maintain the rights and privileges of freemen (who made up the bulk of Sudbury’s electors), to preserve liberty of conscience, and improve existing institutions ‘with a hearty disposition to preserve them’.
Following this political disappointment, Hamilton returned to his military career, and in January 1838 went to Canada as one of the newly appointed field officers charged with organising the militia during the Canadian rebellion.
Hamilton remained active in Marylebone’s politics after this defeat, taking a particular interest in the affairs of the vestry and the administration of the poor law.
Hamilton and his wife possessed considerable property in Pembrokeshire, Cardiganshire and Carmarthenshire, some of which had been inherited from Lady Hamilton’s father, and Hamilton was considered as a candidate for Carmarthenshire in 1857.
It was, however, London politics, particularly in Marylebone, which continued to occupy the bulk of his attention. He chaired public meetings on subjects ranging from the abolition of income tax in 1857 to the formation of a volunteer rifle corps in 1859, and was a keen supporter of the latter, suggesting on one occasion that no lady should allow herself to be courted by a gentleman who was not a member.
In 1870 Hamilton survived a serious mishap when he accidentally drank a draught of laudanum at his Welsh residence, Plas Llanstephan, Carmarthenshire.
