Viscount Primrose heard from his friend Lord Clonmell in Ireland in December 1804 that, through the Irish chief secretary, he might have the offer of a seat ‘during the remainder of this Parliament for 2,500 guineas’. Uncertain of the duration of the Parliament, he asked the advice of a family friend, Walter Spencer Stanhope, as to how to bargain for it without losing his investment by a sudden dissolution.
In the House he made no known speech, but was listed a supporter of Pitt in July 1805. On 31 Dec. 1805 he received Pitt’s circular to attend at the opening of the session.
After succeeding to the title in 1814, Rosebery continued to take a keen interest in public affairs and early in 1818 he purchased from the patron of Malmesbury two seats for the next Parliament for friends of his. He himself became a representative peer. He remained a Whig, zealous for parliamentary reform. He completed the efforts made by his father to restore the family fortunes and epitomized this by removing from the picturesque but unsafe Barnbougle Castle, where he was born, to the more amenable Dalmeny.
