Lord Ossulston, ‘Little O’, a Foxite with a pretty French wife, was a member with his brother Henry of the Whig ‘Mountain’.
Ossulston accepted Henry’s political leadership and divided steadily with the main Whig opposition on major issues and with the ‘Mountain’ for economy and retrenchment, but his support for radical measures was spasmodic. Although known to be favourable to Catholic relief, he failed to vote for it, 28 Feb. 1821. He divided for parliamentary reform, 9 May 1821, 25 Apr. 1822, voted for his brother’s bill to increase Parliament’s independence by reducing the number of placemen, 31 May 1821, and divided against the burgh accounts bill, 19 July 1822. He voted to make forgery a non-capital offence, 4 June 1821. The Bennets (both diminutive figures) were among Queen Caroline’s ‘furious partisans’ depicted in Cruikshank’s cartoon ‘The Cradle Hymn’.
As 5th earl of Takerville, he inherited Chillingham Park and estates at Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, and in Shropshire.
