Richard Sutton’s father was the well-known ambassador. In 1750 William Warburton, later bishop of Gloucester, described Sutton as ‘the most extraordinary young boy I ever knew’—‘he speaks and writes Spanish and French with great exactness, understands Italian, and is now learning High Dutch’.
for some time past wished for an opportunity to see your Majesty alone in order to mention the uneasiness he is under with regards to Mr. Sutton’s late conduct ... there was a violence in his behaviour, that makes it necessary he should not remain in the situation he is in.
He did not think that a person should be kept ‘in employment, who when he is most wanted, is determined to go against Government, and what is worse, against a bill in which your Majesty is principally concerned’; although he did not believe Sutton to be ‘designedly connected with Opposition’. Sutton was not dismissed but resigned on 1 Oct. 1772, having on the death of his brother ‘fallen into a fortune of £4,000 p.a.’
The subject which seems to have preoccupied Sutton most in 1773 was East India affairs, and when in April the leaders at India House were in search of suitable persons to send out to investigate and reform abuses, he was asked, but refused. With both the Government and the Opposition divided over Clive, Sutton was among the ‘ordinary private Members’ whose votes exonerated him.
Sutton was a convinced adherent of the Government’s American policy, and this made him, now a wealthy and independent country gentleman, into their steady supporter: he had already in the previous Parliament, on 26 Apr. 1774, spoken in favour of the bill regulating the government of Massachusetts, deprecating the ‘levelling principle’ that prevailed in New England. In the new Parliament he supported the bill to restrain the fisheries and trade of several American colonies, and on 7 Dec. 1775 described the American prohibitory bill as ‘the most effectual means to restore the people of that country to their senses’. Even on 11 Feb. 1778 he declared against measures of accommodation with ‘our rebellious subjects in America’.
In June 1779, when re-arrangements in offices were under consideration, North put down Sutton for a lord of the Treasury; and John Robinson wrote to Charles Jenkinson, 7 July 1780: ‘Lord North ... is fixed to have Sir Richard Sutton at his Board’; which was arranged on 5 Sept. As, however, Lord Spencer went with the Opposition, a seat had to be found for Sutton, and Robinson in his electoral survey of July 1780 wrote against Sandwich that Sutton proposed ‘to offer himself, and it is hoped will succeed’. With Government support he was returned after a stiff contest. At the opening of the new Parliament, seconding the Address, he ‘presaged the future success of our affairs in America; ... and was now as confident as ever’; but anyhow ‘what measure but the prosecution of hostilities would now be advisable?’
At the general election of 1784, Sutton, siding with the Opposition, did not contest Sandwich where his chances without Government support would have been poor, but was returned by the Duke of Newcastle for Boroughbridge. He still voted with Opposition on Pitt’s Irish proposals, 13 May 1785, but soon afterwards joined the Government side, speaking frequently in the Indian debates of 1787-8, especially in defence of Sir Elijah Impey. He steadily adhered to Pitt during the Regency crisis, 1788-9.
Sutton, himself an active magistrate, showed interest in the condition of the poor. On 2 Feb. 1774, in the debate on a bill to prevent ‘vexatious removals of the poor’, he spoke against lodging discretion in justices: ‘the only sensible principle is for all England to be one parish, but I would have this law made as good as I can at once’; and on 5 Feb. 1782 again supported similar proposals, and protested against the wrong of ‘industrious families’ being driven from a parish for fear that they might become burdensome.
He died 10 Jan. 1802.
