Marryat, a self-made man, had prospered as a West India merchant and ship owner, with London premises at 2 Laurence Pountney Lane and plantations in Grenada, Jamaica and Trinidad. He was a forceful and innovative chairman of Lloyd’s, and in 1819 became a partner in (and soon afterwards head of) the London banking house of Marryat, Kay, Price and Coleman at 1 Mansion House Street. His parliamentary conduct had always been markedly independent, and neither government nor opposition could confidently claim him as their own.
Marryat voted against government on the droits of the crown because of its confiscations in Trinidad and other crown colonies, 5 May, the civil list, 8 May, and the additional Scottish baron of exchequer, 15 May 1820. On the presentation of a London merchants’ petition calling for the removal of purely protective import duties, 8 May, he put the case for colonial preference. On 5 June he presented a London shipbuilders’ petition against remission of the duties on Baltic timber, which he said would ruin the Canadian trade. He then expanded on this theme in support of a similar London ship owners’ petition, delivering a lengthy speech (subsequently published by the Society of Shipowners) in defence of ‘those wise and salutary restrictions upon foreigners’ which safeguarded colonial interests. He presented and endorsed a London merchants’ petition on the timber duties, 20 June. He approved neither of Wilberforce’s compromise resolutions, ‘a sort of pious fraud’, on the Queen Caroline affair, nor of the Whig opposition’s amendment for the restoration of her name to the liturgy; and so left the House before the division, 22 June. On the 26th, believing that ‘justice could not be done between the parties till the truth was ascertained’, but objecting to inquiry by secret committee, he supported the government motion for a further short postponement. He asserted that ‘revolutions were ... generally preceded by infatuated councils, but ... also ... by inflammatory speeches, which the ministers loudly cheered’.
He voted for the restoration of the queen’s name to the liturgy, 23, 26 Jan., but divided with government against the opposition censure motion, 6 Feb. 1821: as he explained when supporting the last motion on the liturgy, 13 Feb., this concession would quell public excitement and ‘restore the queen to her place without driving ministers from theirs’. He did not vote in the division on Catholic relief, 28 Feb. He supported the navy estimates, 2 Feb., and voted with government on the revenue, 6 Mar., and against repeal of the additional malt duty, 3 Apr., and the disfranchisement of ordnance officials, 12 Apr. Continuing his campaign against reduction of the foreign timber duties, he presented a New Brunswick petition, 9 Feb., and appealed for support to the British landowner by forecasting repeal of the corn laws as the inevitable corollary of free trade in timber:
Let him ... adhere to that system to which he owes his present opulence ... and let him beware of encouraging those plausible but delusive theories, which would involve him, as well as the other classes of the community, in one common ruin, only leaving him the consolation of being the last devoured.
He presented more petitions on the same issue, 16, 26 Feb., 14, 16, 19, 21 Mar.
As chairman of the Committee of Landholders of Trinidad, Marryat had continued his vendetta against the governor, Sir Ralph Woodford, who had forced his resignation of the agency over financial irregularities in 1815. Woodford, in Britain on leave in 1821, successfully refuted Marryat’s allegations that he had confiscated lands already granted on lease. Marryat also failed to convince ministers that Woodford had run up excessive expenses in the prosecution of some runaway slaves. On the eve of the 1822 session he informed them of his intention of submitting fresh evidence to substantiate his case against Woodford, which he had been unable to prove in 1819, over the massacre of Colombian refugees refused sanctuary in Trinidad. On the pretext of trying to safeguard British commercial relations with the newly independent South American states, he urged government to terminate Woodford’s governorship, but he was again frustrated.
He voted for Hume’s amendment to the address, 5 Feb. 1822, because distress was widespread and the tax reductions called for would not violate the sinking fund. He divided with government against more extensive retrenchment, 11, 21 Feb., but voted for admiralty reductions, 1 Mar., ‘to convince the public that it was the disposition of the House to make a reasonable abatement of the public burthens’, and for abolition of one of the joint-postmasterships, 13 Mar., 2 May. He was in the opposition minority on Sir Robert Wilson’s* dismissal from the army, 13 Feb. He applauded the ministerial plan to convert the five per cents, 8 Mar.,
Early in 1823 Marryat published extensive Observations on the renewal of the West India Dock Company’s charter and a Reply to the Arguments ... recommending an Equalization of the Duties on East and West Indian Sugar, of which 1,000 copies were ordered for propaganda purposes by the West India Committee.
Marryat attended meetings of the West India Committee, 21 Nov., 30 Dec. 1823.
possessed a great deal of general information [and] a clear, powerful and businesslike manner of speaking, which gave him great ascendancy in all public meetings connected with his own pursuits, and procured him an attentive hearing in the House of Commons.
Gent. Mag. (1824), i. 374; Kentish Gazette, 13 Jan. 1824.
