A Conservative Suffolk landed gentlemen, Kilderbee changed his surname to de Horsey in 1832. He had briefly sat in the unreformed Commons and did little of note in his second spell in the House. The son of the wealthy Suffolk cleric Samuel Kilderbee (1759-1847), de Horsey had in 1813 succeeded to the Great Glemham estate of his paternal grandfather in 1813.
That year de Horsey had changed his name from Kilderbee after becoming co-heir (with his half-brother) to the estates of his maternal grandmother.
Summing up de Horsey’s second spell in the Commons, the chronicler of Staffordshire parliamentary history and founder of the History of Parliament, Josiah Clement Wedgwood MP, wrote that ‘he took no part in debates, but his votes were consistently Conservative, save for that in favour of the abolition of negro apprenticeships [in 1838]’.
De Horsey did not seek re-election at Newcastle-under-Lyme in 1841. He was proposed by Leicester Conservatives at that borough’s nomination, but his absence prompted them to withdraw his name.
which was a real mortification to me, as well as to Ld Hertford [de Horsey’s uncle] who was very anxious that I should be in this Parlt and he has still kindly left me, the power of going as far as [£]4000 to procure myself a seat in case of any vacancy arising with a fair chance of success. I have reason to know that it will afford him great satisfaction should it be in the power of the Gov’t … [if anything] … is to be given me … in the way of an appointment – and I am ready to work for it however small it may be – I am quite aware how many there are with superior claims to any that I have.
Spencer de Horsey to Sir Robert Peel, 29 July 1841, Add. 40485, f. 325.
Peel did not reciprocate and de Horsey does not appear to have sought a return to the Commons. Instead he was increasingly preoccupied with yachting, and he died at Cowes in 1860. He was succeeded in turn by his two sons: William Henry Beaumont de Horsey (1826-1915), a general, and Algernon Frederick Rous de Horsey (1827-1922), an admiral.
