Evelyn, an Irish barrister, was returned in second place for St. Ives in 1820 on the ‘independent’ interest.
In 1824 Evelyn purchased the Kinsham estate from the earl of Oxford, and he later added other properties in Herefordshire and Radnorshire. Shortly before his death in April 1839 he provided a dowry of £16,000 for his daughter from his first marriage, on her marriage to Randall Plunkett, son of the 14th Baron Dunsany. He left an annuity of £250 to his second wife, £5,000 each to their two daughters and the residue, including his estates, to their son Francis (b. 1828); all three children had been born out of wedlock and were described as ‘adopted’. Plunkett, who had spent time in a debtors’ prison, challenged the will, and the protracted litigation that followed meant that Francis’s inheritance was heavily encumbered when his rights were confirmed in 1861.
