A soldier and country gentleman, the Conservative Dyott’s family had played a distinguished part in Staffordshire politics. His ancestor, ‘Dumb’ Dyott, had shot dead the leading Parliamentarian Robert Grenville, 2nd baron Brooke, from the spire of Lichfield Cathedral in 1643.
Dyott came forward as a second Conservative candidate for South Staffordshire at the 1837 general election. He finished third and his father felt that he had not received sufficient backing from local Conservative notables, who had sought a compromise with their Whig opponents to secure the return of John Chetwynd Talbot, viscount Ingestre.
Dyott succeeded his father in 1847 and continued to be linked with the representation of Lichfield, but he did not stand again until the 1865 general election.
Dyott was re-elected for Lichfield, which had been reduced to a single member, in 1868 and sat until unseated on petition after the 1880 general election. As the ‘last of the ancient family of Dyott’, on his death in 1891, in accordance with his will, Freeford Hall passed to his cousin Richard Burnaby, who changed his name to Dyott.
