A Conservative country gentleman, Dugdale’s parliamentary career was abruptly terminated by his unexpected support for repeal of the corn laws in 1846. His staunchly protectionist constituency repudiated him the following year and he did not seek a return to the Commons, and for this reason he has received little coverage in the standard works on the Peelites.
His grandfather, Richard Geast, a London barrister, had assumed the name of Dugdale by royal licence on inheriting the estates of the ancient Warwickshire family in 1799 and his father, Dugdale Stratford Dugdale (?1773-1836), represented Warwickshire, 1802-31. Dugdale senior, however, supported parliamentary reform, unlike his son who opposed the Grey ministry’s reform bills whilst MP for Shaftesbury, 1830-31 and Bramber, 1831-2.
Dugdale offered as a Tory for the new constituency of North Warwickshire at the 1832 general election, and after a close contest, he was surprisingly returned in second place. Dugdale’s nomination speech had been mostly inaudible due to the ‘groans and yells’ from the crowd and on the hustings he was denounced by a prominent local Dissenter and by Joseph Parkes, the Radical election agent. Thomas Attwood, newly elected Radical MP for Birmingham, added the dismissive comment that ‘a mere gentleman was not what the times required’.
In Parliament, Dugdale voted against currency reform, 24 Apr. 1833, despite having alluded to an ‘extended currency’ during his campaign.
Described as a ‘high Conservative’, Dugdale was returned in second place at the 1835 general election, behind a moderate Reformer, with whom he was in tacit alliance.
Dugdale won an easy victory at the 1837 general election, but rumours the following year that he was to retire due to ill-health proved to be unfounded.
Dugdale criticised the Whigs’ proposed low fixed duty on corn, contending that it would lower wages, at the 1841 general election, when he was returned unopposed.
Dugdale ignored a requisition from constituents calling on him to retire, Mar. 1846, but apart from defending his former colleague Sir John Eardley Wilmot’s conduct as a governor of Van Diemen’s Land, 7 June 1847, and opposing the factories bill of the same year, he did little in the remainder of his time in Parliament.
