Reputed to be one of the wealthiest commoners in England, Beaumont was a divisive figure, remembered by one contemporary as ‘thoroughly independent, with no party allegiance [and] great integrity of character’ but by another as ‘a man of little stability of character’.
At the 1832 general election for Northumberland South, Beaumont entered into a coalition with William Ord against the Conservative Matthew Bell, and, after a bitter contest, he topped the poll. Beaumont and Ord’s committee petitioned against Bell’s return, prompting a counter-petition from Bell’s supporters. Beaumont’s undoubted collusion in ensuring that both petitions were abandoned was considered ‘by no means creditable to him’, and his reputation was damaged by the episode.
Unchallenged at the 1835 general election, Beaumont endured a lively nomination at which he declared that ‘I would part with my right hand rather than … give a vote for the ballot’.
This complete turnaround, however, did little to halt his dwindling popularity among his constituents, and he resigned on health grounds at the general election of 1837 rather than risk defeat. He spent most of the next six years in continental Europe, mainly in Italy, before returning home in April 1843, unable to resume his public affairs due to ill health. He died at Bournemouth in December 1848. Although eulogised as ‘a man of high spirit and intelligence, of great frankness of manners and of a munificence and generosity of disposition’, an unsympathetic obituarist noted that his life after parliament ‘affords a striking lesson that large wealth, though it does not fail to excite the temporary adulation of interested parties, is not alone sufficient to purchase happiness or even worldly prosperity’.
