Villiers Stuart was a great-grandson of John Stuart, 3rd earl of Bute (1713-92), Prime Minister, 1762-3, and a maternal descendant of Sir Edward Villiers (c.1585-1626), half-brother of George Villiers, the ill-fated duke of Buckingham. He was orphaned in 1809 by the death of his father and shortly afterwards his mother, from whom his elder brother Henry (MP for County Waterford 1826-29, 1830-1) inherited 30,000 acres at Dromana.
After a short military career, Villiers Stuart became engaged in Waterford politics by campaigning for tithe reform. At the 1832 general election, he questioned the integrity of John Matthew Galwey, the repeal candidate for County Waterford, by revealing the latter’s pledge to vote for the whig candidate Robert Power.
Returned unopposed in 1837 and 1841, he became an active committee member, serving on inquiries to consider the administration of the Royal Dublin Society (1836), the revision of standing orders (1837), the ecclesiastical and manor courts (1837), the civil list (1837-8), and pensions (1837-8).
In 1839 he and Thomas Wyse, Member for Waterford city, brought in a bill to facilitate funding for the city’s fever hospital.
Described by O’Connell as ‘a well-formed man of comely appearance’, Villiers Stuart was said to be ‘much liked in the House of Commons’. In Ireland, however, his liberal reputation came to be questioned.
In addition to the £20,000 presented to him by his brother on his marriage in 1833, Villiers Stuart also acquired an estate at Castletown, co. Tipperary as his wife’s inheritance. An expectation that he would inherit the Dromana estate suffered a setback in 1839, however, when his brother revealed that he had secretly married some years earlier.
