William Smyth Bernard was the fourth son of Francis Bernard, who was an MP in the Irish parliament for Ennis, 1778-83 and Bandon, 1783-90 and, as 1st earl of Bandon, was a representative Irish peer at Westminster, 1801-30.
William’s oldest brother, James Bernard, had sat for Youghal, 1806-7, 1818-20, County Cork, 1807-18, and lastly in his father’s interest for the strongly Protestant town of Bandon in 1820-26 and 1830-1.
Bernard sat as an ultra-Tory, and in August 1834 he had a petition presented on behalf of the landowners of County Cork for the maintenance of the integrity of the church establishment in the face of the Irish church bill. Two months later, during a large loyalist meeting at Bandon in October 1834, Bernard issued a formal invitation to the town’s dissenters to defend their social, economic and religious interests by cooperating with those Conservatives opposed to any dismantling of the church establishment.
In 1851, Bernard finally retired from the army with the rank of lieutenant-colonel and was lined up as the Conservative candidate for Bandon as a replacement for his nephew, Francis Bernard (Viscount Bandon), who succeeded as 3rd earl of Bandon in October 1856. In February 1857, Bernard comfortably defeated William Shaw, the future leader of the home rule party, after a keenly contested and turbulent election. He was returned unopposed at that year’s general election. A supporter of Lord Derby, Bernard’s political views remained ‘ultra-Tory’ and ‘quite in accordance with the hereditary principles of his family’.
Regarded, even by opponents, as ‘a popular country gentleman, a kind neighbour, affable, and courteous’, Bernard died in harness at Queenstown, co. Cork in February 1863. He was succeeded as MP for Bandon by his nephew, the Hon. Henry Boyle Bernard, who held the seat until 1868.
