Edward Leycester, whose father Oswald (bap. 21 Mar. 1752)
Lady Eleanor Butler was short and fat, but Miss Ponsonby was tall and thin, and used often to be supposed to be a man in disguise. They had a romantic attachment for each other, and had forsaken their own families to be more entirely together ... It was they who first told Lady Penrhyn that my handsome brother Edward was like her, and it is said they thus gave her the first idea of making him her heir; but I believe that which really made her do so was her amusement when her young cousin in riding home had not enough money left to pay a turnpike gate and was obliged to leave his handkerchief in pawn with the toll collector.A.J.C. Hare, Memorials of a Quiet Life (1884), i. 3-4, 7, 10-11.
Lady Penrhyn had been widowed in 1808, when the West India merchant and Irish peer Lord Penrhyn, formerly Richard Pennant, Member for Petersfield and Liverpool, left the Penrhyn estate to George Hay Dawkins Pennant, Member for Newark and New Romney. But Lady Penrhyn (who died on 1 Jan. 1816) retained a considerable fortune, and by her will, dated 11 June 1814 (in which she also provided pensions of £45 each for her six horses), she left the residue of her personal estate, which was sworn under £120,000, to Edward Leycester, provided that he changed his name to that of her late husband’s extinct title.
When Ralph Leycester retired from Parliament at the general election of 1830, Lord Grosvenor brought forward Penrhyn as one of his candidates at Shaftesbury, where the independent interest provoked a spirited contest. On the hustings he insisted that he was unshackled and spoke in favour of economies, parliamentary reform, religious toleration, the abolition of slavery and free trade, except in corn. He came top of the poll, but like Grosvenor’s other nominee was roughly handled during the postponed chairing.
He was appointed to the select committee on Irish tithes, 15 Dec. 1831, and, in his only known parliamentary speech, defended ministers on this subject, 27 Mar. 1832. He divided for the second reading of the revised reform bill, 17 Dec., and wrote to Lord Westminster (as Grosvenor had become) on 24 Dec. 1831 that ‘I think the House of Commons will not show much fight on the amended reform bill’.
