Scott’s father had made his fortune as a government grain contractor during the French Wars and took his only son into partnership before 1795, when both signed the London merchants’ loyal declaration. From 1811 the firm traded as Scott, Garnett and Palmer, corn merchants, at 12 Aldermanbury, and from 1840 until the year of this Member’s death as Scott and Garnett, at 2 Moorgate Street. Scott was said by his father to be worth no less than £300,000 in 1813, though this probably owed more to a fortunate marriage than to business success.
According to Oldfield, Scott’s original return for the pocket borough of Whitchurch in 1818 was on the interest of the 4th Viscount Midleton. Scott sat undisturbed throughout this period and by 1831 had bought the patron out.
Following the 1830 general election he was listed by ministers among their ‘friends’ and he duly voted with them on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830. Thomas Gladstone* deemed him ‘too ministerial’ to present a petition he had prepared against the return for Queenborough, but noted that Scott had promised to attend for the select committee ballot, which took place, 30 Nov. 1830.
Scott’s Commons career ended with the extinction of Whitchurch as a parliamentary borough by the Reform Act. At the 1835 election for West Kent he gave a plumper to the Conservative candidate Sir William Geary†.
