The descendant of a branch of an ancient Devonshire family long settled in County Cork, Sampson Stawell was the eighth child of a family of eight brothers and two sisters. He was said to bear a strong resemblance to his father and namesake (1741-1819), who had prospered from milling flour and shipping oats to the south of England, and acquired a reputation as a political radical.
Stawell’s mother was a sister of Francis Bernard, 1st earl Bandon, the arch-Conservative patron of Bandon Bridge, and Stawell was also cousin to Lords Riversdale and Doneraile. His grandfather and great-grandfather had sat in the Irish parliament for Kinsale.
Stawell is only known to have spoken once in the House. In August 1834 he expressed regret at the rejection of the Irish church bill by the House of Lords, arguing that the measure ‘would have been a great advantage to the established church’.
Prior to the 1835 general election O’Connell suggested to the electors of Kinsale that Stawell, though preferable to a Tory, had ‘not come up to their expectations’. Shortly afterwards, Stawell announced his retirement from Kinsale.
