Hill’s father, descended from Samuel Hill of Buckinghamshire, Cromwell’s Irish treasurer, was Member for Derry for 27 years. Hill consolidated his family’s influence in Ulster by marrying into the Beresford family and entered the Irish parliament for Coleraine on the interest of his father-in-law’s brother, the Marquess of Waterford. In 1795 he succeeded his father as Member for Derry. He hoped for legal office, was an adviser on Lord Abercorn’s Irish concerns and in 1798 obtained a lucrative place for which he received compensation of £2,265 per annum at the Union.
For thirty years past no one resident gentleman has been more actively connected with the concerns of the north than myself, no one man more useful in preserving the country from disturbance, when disturbance has been threatened, no man possessed of considerable influence there has exerted it more effectively for good there than I have, frequently, in at least neutralizing and likewise overpowering the radical politics of the Belfast reformers.
I was thanked by ministers for having stopped rebellion from extending by my services in 1797. I have never ceased since to watch and exert myself when critical circumstances require my interference, in fact I am from continued exertion placed in that part of Ireland in estimation with the gentry which mere rank or fortune could not command. How the influence of the Catholic Board in 1813 and 14 was met by vigilance and magisterial firmness and prudence to prevent mischief in that quarter you might know. The part I have successfully taken to induce a large proportion of the north to relinquish the Orange societies as injurious to Protestant interests (for I admit that and no dictation was my motive) entitle[s] me to some merit with my ministerial friends.
Hill made his debut at Westminster by defending the continuation of martial law, 12 Mar. 1801: ‘palliatives were unfit for Ireland’. On 30 Apr. 1802 he defended the Irish revenue collectors, of whom his brother was one, against Corry’s supposed aspersions on them. Like Addington, whose fall Hill declined to witness, Pitt could count on his independent support as a member of the Beresford connexion
In July 1806 Hill was commended by the Irish secretary for his ‘cordial and steady support’ of the Grenville ministry and, at the risk of alienating the Ponsonbys, the Castle decided for the sake of keeping the Beresford squad’s support to allow one of Hill’s brothers to succeed another, who had died, to the lucrative office of collector of the port of Londonderry; though neither of them had a reputation for efficiency. Hill also received government backing for his election, though Lord Howick, for one, thought him ‘a sad fellow, and not to be counted upon for a moment’.
Hill stood by government on the Duke of York’s conduct, February 1809, and in the divisions on the Scheldt expedition, January-March 1810; opposed Irish tithe reform, 14 Apr.; voted against the release of Gale Jones, 16 Apr., against parliamentary reform, 17 May, and against Catholic relief, 1 June 1810. The crisis in the personal affairs of John Claudius Beresford prevented him from attending the Regency debates next session, though pressed to do so,
Subsequently Hill was somewhat out of humour with government and remiss in his attendance.
Hill, who again voted against Catholic relief, 9 May 1817, was prominent in debates on Ireland henceforward. He opposed Newport’s motion of inquiry into the state of Ireland, 20 June 1817. On 13 and 30 June he felt obliged to oppose the Irish grand jury bill then proposed, and while he favoured its introduction in May 1818 he was still not happy about it: the amended bill of February 1819 had his approval. That month he was named to the finance committee. He had supported the Irish assessed taxes, though unpopular, 13 May 1818, and on 30 May 1818 and 7 May 1819 was the advocate of the retention of the district fines scheme to prevent illicit distillation. He doubted the utility or propriety of legislation to safeguard child factory labour in Ireland, 27 Apr. 1819. He presented an anti-Catholic petition from Derry with satisfaction, 3 May 1819, but was out of sympathy with his constituents’ appeal against the window tax which he had presented the night after. Hill died 8 Mar. 1839.
