Robert Shapland Carew’s father and namesake was a substantial and enlightened landlowner, with holdings of more than 20,000 acres in counties Waterford and, more substantially, in Wexford, where he was an energetic local magistrate. He was also an experienced liberal parliamentarian who, as MP for County Wexford, 1812-30 and 1831-4, had consistently supported Catholic relief but was opposed to repeal.
At the ensuing general election he was returned unopposed alongside his fellow Liberal, William Villiers Stuart, but unlike his colleague, he opposed the arms bill of 1843, arguing that conciliation rather than ‘coercive and distrustful legislation’ was necessary to re-establish peace in Ireland. Speaking on the Irish church bill in Aug. 1843, he argued that Catholic claims on the issue should be recognised, and questioned the government’s intention ‘to keep up the Protestant establishment in Ireland, in its present overgrown and glaring deformity’.
In August 1843, he joined 13 other Irish MPs in signing an address to the people of Great Britain, outlining Irish grievances and demanding recognition ‘of the right of the people of Ireland of all classes to an equal participation in religious and educational arrangements’.
Carew succeeded to his father’s title in June 1856, and is only known to have spoken once in the Lords, to second the address to the Queen’s speech in December 1857. He was regarded as an excellent resident landlord and, in 1855, became colonel of the Wexford militia. He died at his residence in Belgrave Square in September 1881 and was buried at Castleborough, his will being proved under £43,480.
