Fitzroy, of whom Charles Darwin wrote ‘I never knew in my life so mixed a character’, is best remembered for his command of the HMS Beagle, on which Darwin voyaged, and for his contributions to meteorology, particularly forecasting.
At the 1831 general election Fitzroy came forward in the Tory interest for Ipswich, in his native county of Suffolk, but after a heated contest in which he warned of the threat that the reform bill posed to the constitution, he was defeated in third place.
At the 1841 general election Fitzroy was brought forward by Lord Londonderry, his maternal uncle, for Durham City. Although he was elected without a contest, his return became mired in controversy when it emerged that Londonderry had encouraged a potential second Conservative candidate, William Sheppard, to retire.
An assiduous attender, Fitzroy divided steadily with Peel on most major issues, but as a devout Anglican, he voted against the Maynooth grant, 20 July 1842. He also periodically questioned ministers over the wisdom of their decisions, for example challenging Lord Stanley, then colonial secretary, over the appointment of a mere ‘engineer officer’ to the governorship of the Falkland Islands, 30 Sept. 1841. He could also be noticeably brazen in his style of speaking, causing him to clash with fellow members. During a debate on agricultural distress, he mocked Richard Cobden for telling the House that ‘he had seen cheese on the summits of the Alps’, arguing that ‘expressing opinions which had been stated over and over again long ago’ did little to alleviate the present distress, 24 Sept. 1841. In response to William Hutt’s attempts to inquire into the Peel ministry’s appointments of borough magistrates, he stated that ‘he was not indisposed to laugh at the motion itself’, describing it as a politically-motivated attempt by an opposition that ‘was of so motley a character as to be most fitly designated by the compound term “Whig-Radical”’, 5 May 1842.
Unsurprisingly, the majority of Fitzroy’s contributions concerned maritime affairs and displayed a mastery of detail. He raised his concerns about the proposals contained in the national floating breakwater bill, insisting that the planned breakwater would only last five years given its structural inadequacies, 15 Mar. 1842, and in a debate on the customs acts, he warned the Commons of the dangers of American competition in whaling, stressing that the profession was ‘the best nursery for seamen we possessed’, 27 May 1842. His expertise was also evident in his questioning of witnesses on the select committee on the Caledonian Canal and in September 1842 he was appointed acting conservator of the river Mersey.
In April 1843 Fitzroy retired from Parliament upon his appointment as the second governor of New Zealand, following the death of his predecessor, Captain William Hobson. He was instructed by Stanley to mediate between the white settlers, represented by the New Zealand Company, and the Maori, and ensure that the treaty of Waitangi, which the colonial secretary believed granted all the country’s lands to the latter, was strictly adhered to.
Following the announcement of his recall in the Commons, Henry Rous, Conservative member for Westminster and briefly lord of the Admiralty, reflected that ‘an angel from heaven could not reconcile the differences between the natives, the missionaries, and the New Zealand Company’, and similar sentiments followed, although Sir Henry Ward, Liberal member for Sheffield and later secretary to the admiralty, insisted that Fitzroy’s conduct ‘had been most mischievous and unfortunate’.
Following his recall, Fitzroy held brief positions as superintendent of the Woolwich Dockyard, commander of the frigate HMS Arrogant, managing director of the General Screw Steam Shipping Company, and personal secretary to his uncle Lord Hardinge, before being appointed superintendent of the board of trade’s newly established meteorological department in 1854, whereupon he assiduously investigated the relationship between the specific gravity of sea water and changes in the weather.
Although Fitzroy’s work was recognized abroad, particularly in France where he had carried out parts of his research, the British press, whilst initially supportive, became increasingly sceptical about his ‘forecasts’, with a leading article in The Times commenting that ‘Nature seems to have taken special pleasure in confounding the conjectures of science’, and a later one stating that ‘Admiral Fitzroy has still to convince the public’.
After his death, the ‘Fitzroy barometer’, consisting of a siphon barometer with attached thermometer, began to be manufactured. It was still being produced in the late twentieth century. His name was given to several ‘geographical features’ in Patagonia and Australia, and in 2002 a shipping forecast area off north-west Spain was named after him.
