A ‘Radical Reformer’ and barrister, Duckworth made little impact during his brief stint in Parliament, but ‘although he did not take any conspicuous part in public life, he was always a consistent and steady adherent of the liberal party’.
After leaving Cambridge, Duckworth embarked on a legal career, aided by his brother-in-law Sir Thomas Coltman, who became one of the judges of the court of common pleas, and he was one of the commissioners of inquiry into the law respecting real property appointed by the Lord Chancellor, 3rd earl Bathurst, in 1830.
Looking for two new candidates to recapture the two seats lost in 1835, Leicester’s Reformers solicited Duckworth after he was recommended by Edward Dawson, MP for South Leicestershire, 1832-35.
At Parliament he cast votes in favour of the ballot, the new poor law, and also supported the appropriation of surplus revenues from the Irish church to be applied for the ‘moral and religious education’ of all Irish people.
Duckworth died unmarried while in Paris in December 1848, and was succeeded by his brother William Duckworth (1795-1876), who established the family in Somerset after purchasing the Orchardleigh Park estate in 1855.
