Hanger, a rake and gambler, owed his seat in Parliament to his friendship with Henry Pelham Clinton, Duke of Newcastle, and may have obtained it to avoid his creditors. In August 1774 George Selwyn wrote to Lord Carlisle:
In 1780 Hanger was returned by Lord Falmouth at Mitchell as a Government candidate. He supported North’s Administration until the end, voted against Shelburne’s peace preliminaries, and in Robinson’s list of March 1783 was described as of Lord North’s connexion. He voted with Pitt on parliamentary reform, 7 May 1783, and for Fox’s East India bill, 27 Nov. 1783. Late in 1783 Robinson wrote in his survey that Lord Falmouth might ‘probably be prevailed on to bring in a friend vice Hanger’, and Hanger, who was classed as a Foxite by Robinson in January 1784 and in Stockdale’s list of 19 Mar., did not stand at the general election of 1784.
He died 11 Dec. 1814.
