Walter Cecil Talbot’s grandfather, Charles Chetwynd, 2nd earl Talbot of Hensol (1777-1849), was lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1817-21 and a steady opponent of Catholic emancipation.
Though from a long-established Staffordshire family, Talbot was a nephew of the 4th marquess of Waterford, and, in what became known as the ‘Great Shrewsbury Case’ of 1857-8, his father had established his claim to the earldom of Shrewsbury, which co-incidentially brought with it the ancient titles earl of Waterford and hereditary high steward of Ireland.
Talbot sat in parliament as a ‘decided Conservative’, his allegiance to the Derbyites further cemented after another of his uncles, Wellington Chetwynd Talbot (1817-98), married Emma Stanley, the daughter of Lord Derby in October 1860.
Indeed, throughout his time in parliament, Talbot continued to serve in the Royal Navy. Shortly after his election in 1859, he had been promoted to commander and, in January1865, had been ordered on foreign service, taking command of HMS Fawn at the North American and West Indian station. Consequently, he stood down as MP in favour of Lord Waterford’s son, the earl of Tyrone, at the 1865 general election. After Tyrone vacated the seat upon succeeding to his father’s title in November 1866, Talbot, a newly promoted captain, returned to Ireland to contest the ensuing by-election as ‘an independent supporter of the Conservative Government’.
Thereafter he resumed his naval career. From 1871, he commanded HMS Bristol, a naval cadet training ship at Portsmouth, and in 1876 was appointed captain of the Duke of Wellington, the flagship of the port admiral. Like his father before him, he served as naval aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria from 1880-2, when he was appointed rear admiral. In 1887 he married the sister of baron Walsingham, his first wife, having died in childbirth in 1876, and became the senior officer at Queenstown, Co. Cork. He was promoted to admiral in 1894 and retired from the service in 1896.
