A representative of a younger branch of the Fitzpatrick family,
Fitzpatrick’s father died in 1818 without a legitimate male heir and his titles became extinct.
Despite failing to satisfy some local radicals on his attitude towards progressive reform, he enlisted the aid of Daniel O’Connell to achieve ‘a glorious triumph’ at Queen’s County in 1837. As the advocate of ‘equal laws’ and a critic of those ‘political Protestants’ who sought to deny them, he defeated the sitting Conservative member, but refused to endorse the system of ‘exclusive dealing’ proposed by his leading supporters.
Fitzpatrick rallied to the Whig ministry in the confidence vote, 31 Jan. 1840, opposed the censure motion on the government’s conduct towards China, 9 Apr. 1840, and divided against the motion for a committee to consider the corn laws, 26 May 1840. He spoke only infrequently in the House, but in March 1840 criticised Lord Stanley’s Irish electoral registration bill on the ground that its sole effect would be ‘to curtail the franchise’ by discouraging registration. The measure, he contended, failed to ‘grapple effectively with the crime of perjury … in the registry courts’, and he suggested that before any scheme of annual registration could be contemplated the franchise must first be placed ‘on such plain and well-defined grounds, that they cannot be misunderstood’.
Upon the death of his half-sister Lady Gertrude Fitzpatrick in September 1841, he inherited his father’s Irish estates at Grantstown Manor and Lisduff in Queen’s County, and at Grafton Underwood in Northamptonshire, and formally assumed the name Fitzpatrick in February 1842.
Having been approached by the local Liberal gentry and freeholders to stand again for parliament, he was returned unopposed for Queen’s County in 1847 as a strong supporter of the Whig ministry, having refused to take the repeal pledge.
Fitzpatrick attended the House quite regularly, dividing in 61 of the 219 votes in 1849.
Although Fitzpatrick considered himself ‘intimately connected’ with the agricultural interest, he was absent from the vote on Disraeli’s motion to relieve the burden on agriculture, 13 Feb. 1851, when he was listed as a ‘free trader’. Later that year he served on select committees on the law of mortmain and the Kaffir tribes of South Africa.
In 1852 Fitzpatrick stood at the general election as a Whig, but one prepared to give a ‘fair trial’ for Lord Derby’s ministry, regarding measures of ‘progressive reform’ as necessary for institutional stability and ‘the welfare of the people’. He was, however, still at loggerheads with the local Catholic clergy over the Titles Act, and so abandoned his pretensions on the morning of the nomination, ‘seeing no chance of success’ against a popular Liberal candidate.
By this time Fitzpatrick was ‘one of the most assiduous cultivators of pure Whiggism at the Fox Club’, and was appointed lord lieutenant of Queen’s County in November 1855. He was, however, persuaded by the Catholic clergy and popular electors of Queen’s County to stand again in 1857, having explained that he regarded the titles question ‘as a mere defence of the prerogative of the crown’ which would never have had his support if it had been ‘intended to obstruct the spiritual progress or interfere with the discipline of the Roman Catholic church’.
Fitzpatrick returned to politics in 1865 when, having shed some of his Whig principles, he was returned as a Liberal for Queen’s County. Although absent from the hustings, he secured second place in the poll, ahead of a tenant-right candidate.
Despite of his illegitimate birth and the fact that he possessed relatively little land in Great Britain, Fitzpatrick was created a peer of the United Kingdom in November 1869.
