When in 1710 Charles Vernon’s grandfather was turned out of the secretaryship of state, Charles’s father received a commissionership of Excise. This he retained till 6 Apr. 1756 when, nine days before his death, he resigned it against a pension for Charles of £300 p.a.; which Charles continued to draw at least till 1802, and most probably till his death in 1810—a century of benefits at public expense.
Charles Vernon was connected with Lord Townshend who returned him for Tamworth.
He is brother of Lord Orwell’s with whom he has long quarrelled, is remarkable for strong passions and an active mind supplying a deficiency of ability with industry, intrigue, and acrimony, unforgiving in his nature, low and cunning in his pursuits, the first from the worst temper and disposition I ever met in any man, the last from prodigious selfishness. But he is more remarkable still in his hatred to the Duke of Cumberland.
Having made the desired impression on Charles Townshend’s ‘weather cock disposition’, Vernon went to Granby,
with whom he had long been upon the same footing as with my Lord Townshend and operated upon his mind ... through ... a jealousy of the Keppels, and an engagement with Grenville.
Some time after 1774 Vernon presented a memorandum to the King
He died 3 Aug. 1810.
