By the death in 1805 of his brother John, Scudamore became trustee to the Kentchurch estate during the minority of his nephew John Lucy Scudamore (1798-1875) and Member for Hereford, which his family had represented since 1764 on their own and the Whig 11th duke of Norfolk’s interest. Continuing the family tradition, he attended the House regularly, supported reform, retrenchment and Catholic relief and became a silent but uncompromising opponent of the Liverpool government. He was defeated by a Tory at Hereford in 1818 (at the first election following Norfolk’s death), but regained his seat at a by-election the following year.
Until 1822, when his health deteriorated and Kentchurch went into receivership, leaving his finances in disarray, Scudamore, as a radical publication of 1825 noted, ‘attended frequently and voted with opposition’; he was fêted accordingly at the Hereford Whig dinner for Joseph Hume*, 7 Dec. 1821.
He died childless and unmarried at his London home in March 1831 worth £450-600, having bequeathed his entire estate to ‘Mary Webb, otherwise Prescott’, who resided with him and was required to repay his debts.
