Glyn
Glyn unsuccessfully contested London at the general election of 1754. In 1758-9, as lord mayor, he led the City in support of the Administration, and the same year was returned unopposed for London at a by-election. In 1761 he came out fourth on the poll. Lady Grey wrote to Lord Royston after the election: ‘I have heard it supposed that when Beckford was secure himself, he made common cause with, and assisted Sir Richard.’ In Bute’s list he is marked as ‘Tory’ with a query, and as ‘Pitt’. He was among the aldermen who in October 1761 supported a proposal in common council that Pitt should be thanked for his ‘eminent and great services’.
When at the general election of 1768 Glyn again stood for the City in opposition to Wilkes and Barlow Trecothick, his former colleagues, Beckford, Harley, and Ladbroke, canvassing jointly, seem to have formally dissociated themselves from him. In a fierce election campaign he was attacked as a follower of Bute, and ridiculed as ‘a man of heavy temper, rotundity of form, and vacuity of look, and therefore not a proper person to represent the City of London in Parliament’; while his speech before the livery was condescendingly reported: ‘There was not much in what he said, but upon the whole it was very well, and exactly what might be expected from such a good-natured little man.’
In 1772 Glyn’s bank was seriously affected by the Ayr bank failure and stopped payment on 22 June. He and his partners were able to restore their credit, and re-opened on 6 Aug. But when Glyn died on 1 Jan. 1773, his death, so soon after the failure of 1772, gave rise to rumours of suicide, which were denied in the press by his physician.
