A former mayor of Warwick, Greaves turned his banking experience to account in financial debates, but otherwise offered silent support for the Conservative leadership. His family were originally from Moseley, Worcestershire, but by his father’s time they were resident in Warwickshire, and Greaves acquired through marriage the ‘neat mansion’ of Avonside, Barford, in the same county.
In his first session Greaves supported Disraeli’s budget, 16 Dec. 1852, opposed Gladstone’s budget, 2 May 1853, and the following year complained of the same Chancellor’s plan to reduce the interest on Exchequer bills, 30 Mar. 1854, which he considered ‘injudicious’ given the current financial climate.
A slow start to his campaign at the 1865 general election cost Greaves his seat, as he was relegated to third place by a Liberal, however he was returned in second place at the 1868 general election, before retiring in 1874. He died five years later, having been ‘in failing health for a considerable time, and … unable to attend to any business’.
