Jones’s father, a barrister, ‘who doth not practice, nor hath he exerted himself’,
When Newcastle left the Treasury in November 1756, Jones was given the reversion to the comptrollership of the customs, to which in 1759 Newcastle wanted to add a pension on the Irish establishment. But as Hardwicke objected, lest people should say that it was held by Jones in trust for him,
With places worth over £1,600 a year and a reversion of £1,200, Jones still pressed Newcastle for an additional appointment in the customs ‘reputed £2,000 per annum’. Newcastle wrote to Hardwicke on 13 Sept. 1760:
I perceived for these two last days an alteration in him; and as I always do with my friends I spoke to him and I found him harping or still muttering about the holding both places ... I have experience enough in these matters to know that a man that talks so is not pleased, and what is my situation if Mr. Jones is not now pleased with me?
Hardwicke replied the next day:
Your Grace does him the honour and justice to say you know his good heart and so do I. He is very honest and nobody can possible have more duty and gratitude to your Grace or be more sensible of his infinite obligations to you.
Add. 32911, ff. 272, 301.
His advice was ‘not to take the least future notice of it’.
Jones remained solicitor to the Treasury after Newcastle’s resignation in 1762, and, in 1771, exchanged his commissionership of the revenue in Ireland for a pension of £725 on the Irish establishment; when in 1780 his reversion of the comptrollership of the customs fell in, this gave him an additional £1,085 per annum. He died 9 Jan. 1800.
