While Taylor’s grandfather, Robert (c.1690-1742), a London stone mason, reportedly died virtually bankrupt, his father, Sir Robert Taylor (1714-88), a sculptor turned architect, whose work included substantial parts of the Bank of England, had amassed a fortune of £180,000 at his death.
in appearance he was one of that sort of persons whom you could not pass in the streets without exclaiming, “Who can that be?” His face blushed with port wine, the purple tints of which, by contrast, caused his white hair to glitter with silvery brightness; he wore leather breeches, top boots, blue coat, white waistcoat, and an unstarched and exquisitely white neckcloth, the whole surmounted by a very broad-brimmed beaver.
R.H. Gronow, Reminiscences of Captain Gronow (2nd edn., 1862), 81.
In 1831 Taylor stood down at Durham city, where he had sat on his wife’s interest from 1800-2 and since 1818, after a belated canvass, his local support having dwindled despite his backing for the reform bill.
This did not, however, prove to be the case, for Taylor offered as ‘the reform candidate’ for the venal borough of Sudbury in 1832, with the assistance of his wife’s nephew, Rev. John (‘Jack’) Vane.
A ‘moderate and consistent Whig’, Taylor generally supported Grey’s ministry in his final Parliament.
Taylor was buried in the family vault at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London.
