After his first unsuccessful bid at Sudbury in 1784, Dickins never stood a contest. He was his wife’s kinsman the Duke of Rutland’s nominee for Cambridge, where his expenses were paid by John Mortlock. As anticipated, he supported government.
Dickins’s preoccupations in the House were those of a country gentleman and magistrate. In his first full Parliament he made no mark, apart from presenting the Poole election committee’s report, 25 Feb. 1791, being listed hostile to the repeal of the Test Act in Scotland that April, taking leave of absence, 4 Mar. 1793, and voting against the abolition of the slave trade. He was stung into activity by Pitt’s tax proposals in 1798. On 4 Jan. he had voted for the assessed taxes. On 23 Apr. he voted against the land tax redemption bill; on 30 Apr. he expressed his support for Pulteney’s amendment to the assessed taxes bill. On 18 May he voted for Buxton’s proposal that there should be no fresh land tax without a tax on all property. On 22 Jan. 1800 he voted with the minority for a call of the House. In the sessions of 1801 and 1802 he had something to say—the reporters seldom specified what—on the poor rates, fallow potato growing, the upkeep of parsonages, turnpikes and workhouses. He was chairman of the committee on the county coroners bill which he had enthusiastically supported: it was ultimately foiled, 10 May 1803.
Apart from his vote for his brother-in-law Manners Sutton’s motion for inquiry into the Prince of Wales’s income, 31 Mar. 1802, Dickins adhered to Addington’s ministry. He was said to have asked Addington for a peerage.
Dickins was elbowed out of his seat in 1806. He could not afford a contest; in 1803 he had negotiated a loan from Reginald Pole Carew.
Dickins apparently wished to remain in Parliament: so, at least, he hinted when he was presented with a sword in token of 13 years’ command of the Wellingborough yeomanry in December 1807. But he hinted in vain. He died 23 Dec. 1833, aged 83.
