The Heneage family, owners of the Hainton estates situated seven miles south east of Market Rasen, had long played a part in local and national government. John Heneage was MP for Grimsby in 1494. His son, Sir Thomas Heneage, was a private secretary to Thomas Wolsey and later filled various offices under Henry VIII. His nephew and heir, Sir George Heneage, was MP for Lincolnshire and for Essex as well as holding office under Elizabeth I. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the Heneages were excluded from holding office on account of their Roman Catholicism. Heneage’s father, however, became a Protestant in time to serve as Lincolnshire’s high sheriff in 1813. George Fieschi Heneage, known as ‘Fish’ in Lincolnshire circles as a result of his second name, was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge. Though very well read, he was a lethargic man and not given to public speaking. On the hustings he was invariably drowned out by shouting from the crowd, and he appears to have spoken in the Commons on only three occasions. One contemporary observed of him that he ‘is sometimes apparently in a trance and dead as it were to all around him and then starting up, making some absurd observation, and then laughing the most curious laugh at his own wit’. In January 1833 Heneage married into a Yorkshire Catholic family, the Tasburghs, his wife Frances being described as ‘not at all pretty but on a very large scale’. Later that year he inherited the Hainton estates of over 10,000 acres.
By this time Heneage had already represented Great Grimsby and Lincoln in the Whig interest, having first entered the Commons in 1826. He was re-elected at Lincoln in 1832, although his relations with his election committee became increasingly strained. The Lincoln radicals saw Heneage as a timid supporter of reform. An infrequent attender, he had divided for reform of the Irish church, 11 Mar. 1833, but paired against the ballot, 25 Apr. 1833, and opposed Joseph Hume’s motion for a low fixed duty on corn, 7 Mar. 1834. Some of his erstwhile supporters made clear their intention to plump for Edward Bulwer at the next opportunity if that was what was required to secure the return of the second reform candidate.
Heneage reappeared at the general election of 1852. He was certainly not the first choice of the Lincoln Whig protectionists, but there was no one else. In his letter to the electorate in April 1852 Heneage described himself as ‘the friend of civil and religious liberty’ and ‘[w]ith respect to the great question of protection of British agriculture, [he had] always steadily supported it whilst in Parliament and [he would] do his best to aid it at the present time’. His views on the suffrage confirmed the earlier suspicions of the Lincoln radicals: he would not support a household suffrage as low as £5 per annum. Heneage attempted to speak at the nomination, but, owing to the noise made by the non-electors, could not be heard.
Back in Parliament, Heneage rarely contributed to debate, does not appear to have served on any select committees, and was a lacklustre attender, present for 41 out of 257 divisions in the 1853 session and 40 out of 198 in 1856.
In March 1857 Heneage issued a letter stating that he intended to defend his seat. In his opinion the Crimean War had been ‘a necessity which could not be avoided’ and the country needed to maintain ‘considerable’ military power; in a flicker of his old Liberalism, he tacked on a call for a ‘good, sound system of national education’. Above the noise on nomination day, Heneage praised Palmerston and claimed that he was a reformer still, though this went no further than suggesting that there was scope to transfer some seats to towns in Middlesex, Surrey and Lancashire.
At the 1859 election Heneage held on to second place, though his majority over Palmer fell to only 29. In his address he declared that educational advances now permitted him to support a limited extension of the franchise and that, though church rates should not be abolished, Nonconformists should be excused from paying them.
With support for him declining in Lincoln, Heneage seized what appeared to be a new opportunity in 1862.
Heneage died on 11 May 1864 from ‘water on the chest’.
