Faithfull’s election for Brighton in 1832 ‘under the very nose of the court’ sent shock waves through high society.
Faithfull’s early life is obscure. The fourth son of a Winchester attorney, who had acted for the Whigs in the notoriously venal Hampshire election of 1790, by the 1820s he and his brother Henry were partners in one of Brighton’s leading firms of solicitors, with offices at 15 Ship Street.
Faithfull took a leading role in the agitation for parliamentary reform got up by the Brighton Political Union.
In the first of six known spoken interventions, Faithfull demanded reform of the legislation governing the Speaker’s pension, arguing that it was unsatisfactory for his entitlements to be left to his own discretion, and was in the radical minority of 31 for his replacement by E. J. Littleton, 29 Jan. 1833. Recalling the debate a few days later, Denis Le Marchant observed that ‘Mr Faithful, of Brighton, was the only one of the debutantes who promised fairly. He has a lean, hungry aspect with a quick eye and a pointed and argumentative style’.
At the 1835 general election Faithfull offered again, declaring his support for shorter parliaments, vote by ballot, household suffrage, the repeal of the malt tax and corn laws, the expulsion of bishops from the House of Lords, the separation of Church and state, and severe laws against bribery and treating.
Thereafter Faithfull flirted with Brighton’s emerging Chartist movement, lending its leaders, notably the former hairdresser John Good, the grudging support of his paper until it ceased publication in 1839, asa result of a libel suit and mounting debts.
By now Faithfull had acquired a power of attorney from Kemp, and in January 1842 arranged the ‘great sale’ of all his Brighton estates in order to try and settle his debts, which was a complete failure, although Faithfull himself was able to acquire Chichester House. It was on Faithfull’s watch that Kemp was declared an outlaw in 1844, for failing to respond to an suit by Sir William Pilkington, for which Faithfull has been accused of neglecting his client’s affairs.
Faithfull took a leading part in the successful campaign against the imposition of the 1848 Public Health Act on Brighton, which he believed was ‘part of an abominable centralization system’, but broke with his former supporters over the replacement of the town commissioners with a municipal town council, elected on a broader (male) franchise.
Faithfull died in 1863 at his Brighton home in Buckingham Place, where he lived with two grandchildren, ‘after a few hours illness’ and was succeeded by his eldest son and namesake, who had followed him into practice.
