Lords of the manors of Shipley and Mapperley, the Miller Mundys were descended from a junior branch of the Mundys of Markeaton, founded when Mundy’s great-grandfather, Edward (1714-67), married Hester, daughter and heiress of Robert Miller of Shipley.
As chairman of the South Derbyshire Independent and Conservative Association, 1835-41, Mundy oversaw the party’s growing ascendancy in the constituency.
A silent but regular attendee, Mundy gave general support to the Conservative ministry in the lobbies on most issues, especially those concerned with the established Church and the constitution, but he was not afraid to vote against the party leadership when he felt their policies were not consistent with their professed political principles. As a staunch Protestant, he repeatedly voted against the Maynooth grant and opposed the own government’s Maynooth College bill at every stage in 1845.
He faced no contest at the 1847 election, telling electors during his canvass that he would give free trade a ‘full and fair trial’.
Recuperating from illness, he died in Barbados, 29 Jan. 1849, and was succeeded by his brother, Alfred Miller Mundy (1809-77), who had been colonial secretary of South Australia since 1844.
