A polymath and prodigy, Talbot gave general support to Grey’s ministry during his brief parliamentary career, which he abandoned to focus on scientific pursuits, most famously the development of photography, a concept he had thought of whilst an MP.
Talbot never knew his father, William Davenport Talbot, a soldier, who died less than six months after his birth, leaving the family seat of Lacock Abbey heavily encumbered. Thereafter Talbot and his mother lived at a succession of properties whilst renting out Lacock, whose occupants included John Rock Grosett, MP for Chippenham, before their return in 1827.
Talbot possessed Whig connections, his mother’s sister being married to Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 3rd marquis of Lansdowne, and at the 1831 general election he offered for the borough of Chippenham, three miles from Lacock.
Talbot retired at the 1835 general election, informing his constituents that ‘in these days of party conflict, a seat in Parliament has become less an object of my ambition, than in more tranquil, and, may I add, more reasonable times’.
Talbot spent his later years translating Assyrian texts and perfecting photographic engraving, which he had invented in 1852. During his lifetime Talbot made distinguished contributions to botany, physics, astronomy, and mathematics, and his achievements were recognized through numerous honours including, from the Royal Society, the Bakerian Prize (1836), Royal Medal (1837) and Rumford Medal (1842). He was admitted as a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1858 and in 1863 received an honorary doctorate of law from that city’s university. On his death in 1877 he was succeeded by his only son, the childless Charles Henry (1842-1916), after whom the estates passed to Talbot’s female descendants.
