One of eleven children, Talbot was the eldest of six sons of James Talbot and part of an ‘old Catholic Dublin family’ who shared ancestry with the earls of Shrewsbury and (on his mother’s side) the Milesian princely house of Breffney.
Talbot was returned as a Reformer but the degree to which he sympathised with repeal remained unclear. After being nominated in person for membership of the National Political Union, 4 Sept. 1832, he was absent when formally admitted to the body a week later, at which time Edward Ruthven claimed that Talbot was ‘the unflinching supporter of freedom, and the inflexible advocate of repeal’.
Talbot, however, took no part in O’Connell’s National Council in January 1833, and quickly demonstrated his independence in the House. Being ‘painfully convinced’ that ‘strong measures were necessary to the peace of Ireland’, he satisfied himself that the Irish coercion bill ‘was not meant to enforce the payment of tithes’, and so declined the ‘great pleasure’ it might have given him to join O’Connell in the minority against the bill’s first and second readings, 1 and 11 Mar. 1833. However, after the Athlone Trades’ Political Union threatened to ‘displace him if he did not reverse his conduct’, he did raise objections to some clauses of the bill, denouncing ‘domiciliary visits as a horrible abuse’ and declaring ‘arbitrary imprisonment as unnecessary’. He also voted against providing the Irish authorities with the power of trying civil offences by courts martial, 20 Mar. 1833.
Talbot had opposed Joseph Hume’s resolutions in favour of economy in the public service, 14 Feb., but voted for Thomas Attwood’s committee on distress, 21 Mar. 1833. That month he sat on the select committee on the Southampton election petition and served the inquiry into the Bristol election that April.
On returning to Westminster in 1834, Talbot voted against Daniel Harvey’s motion for a select committee to scrutinise the pension list, 18 Feb., and opposed James Silk Buckingham’s motion for a select committee to consider an alternative to naval impressment, 4 Mar. He supported Lord Chandos’s motion on agricultural distress, 21 Feb., but opposed Hume’s motion for a low fixed duty on corn, 7 Mar. He divided in favour of Colonel Williams’s plan to admit Dissenters to the universities, 17 Apr. He sided against the repealers once more by supporting Althorp’s motion that church rates be replaced by funds raised by a land tax, 21 Apr., thus reinforcing O’Connell’s expressed belief that Talbot should not remain in parliament.
At the same time, Talbot rendered considerable service to his constituency. In June 1834 he moved successfully for an inquiry into the navigation of the River Shannon and its tributaries, and to assess the value of the lands adjoining the river. The committee, on which he served, also investigated the best means of improving the river so as to encourage manufactures, commerce, and agriculture along its course.
Talbot once again incurred O’Connell’s emnity for opposing his repeal motion, 29 Apr. 1834, and it has been asserted that because Talbot was not ‘sufficiently plastic’ to suit O’Connell and his party he was advised ‘not to offer himself for re-election’.
Although Talbot helped to keep the cause of reform alive in Somerset, chairing a meeting of the Shepton Mallet Reform Association in October 1836, thereafter he appears to have played little part in politics.
A member of numerous learned bodies, Talbot’s help and encouragement to John O’Donovan in his Celtic studies helped to earn him the presidency of the Royal Irish Academy. His wife having predeceased him by almost ten years, he died at Funchal, Madeira, in April 1883, his wealth at death being £23,354. He was succeeded in the title by his eldest son, Richard Wogan Talbot (1846-1921), a former military officer and later a Liberal Unionist peer.
