Two days before the Westminster election of 1741 it was decided to put up Admiral Vernon for the city against the government candidates. ‘Mr. Edwin, a gentleman of Wales, of good fortune, appearing accidentally at the meeting held for the purpose of the Admiral’s nomination, was joined with him’.
Poor Mr. Edwin’s name at first turned the thing to a farce, but the poll has been carried on with great vigour and expense on both sides ... Mr. Edwin having neither chance nor pretence his part is ridiculous enough, and those who really wish the Prince well are vexed there should be an opposition made with so little prospect of success, and by a man of so little eminence.
HMC Carlisle, 197.
On the annulment of the election by the Commons the Prince and the opposition leaders could not prevent Edwin, ‘who accidentally was the person pitched upon by the mob for the first contest’, from being re-nominated since ‘it was impossible to suppose the people would depart from him in gratitude for the money he had spent’.
A Tory, Edwin, known to his friends as ‘Numps’,
In 1747 Edwin was returned on the Tory interest for Glamorgan. He died 29 June 1756.
