A naval officer, who had fought in the Napoleonic Wars, A’Court had represented the borough of Heytesbury on the interest of his brother, Lord Heytesbury, in the unreformed Parliament. Before his constituency was disenfranchised by the 1832 Reform Act, which A’Court opposed, he had generally given silent support to successive Tory governments and voted against Catholic relief in 1829.
In 1837 A’Court inherited Amington Hall, in Warwickshire, from his father’s first cousin, Charles Edward Repington (1755-1837).
A’Court was silent in the 1838 session, but followed a Conservative line, opposing the Whigs’ attempts to reform the Irish church and tithe, supporting the new poor law and backing Sandon’s motion condemning the Whig government’s Canadian policy, 7 Mar. 1838. A’Court also divided against radical political reforms such as the ballot, and Villiers’s anti-corn law motions. In 1839 A’Court noted smugly to Peel that the Whig chancellor of the exchequer Thomas Spring Rice and the Irish leader Daniel O’Connell were ‘at loggerheads respecting the renewal of the Irish bank charter’.
A’Court backed Peel’s motion of no confidence in the Whig government, 4 June 1841, and was re-elected at the ensuing general election, when he expressed opposition to any alteration of the corn laws and sugar duties. The Whigs had only brought forward these measures to ‘delude the public’ and he further complained that Lord Palmerston’s foreign policy had ‘involved us in disputes with almost every other country in the universe’.
I have less regret in coming to this determination as I feel that the situation would have placed me rather too much out of my line, the very name of Greenwich carrying to my mind a sort of retirement.
A’Court to Peel, 6 Oct. 1841, Add. 40491, ff. 82-3.
A’Court supported Peel’s revision of the corn laws and re-introduction of income tax in 1842 and continued to oppose radical political reforms. An additional reason for his loyalty towards Peel’s government was the appointment of his brother Lord Heytesbury as lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1844. Like his leader and parliamentary colleague, A’Court opposed attempts to revise or repeal the new poor law or reduce the powers of the poor law commission, 17, 21, 27 June 1842. He was similarly resistant to the 10 hour day in textile factories, 22 Mar. 1844. All of this suggests that like Peel, A’Court had laissez-faire views on the economic role of the state, at odds with paternalist Conservatives. Although A’Court continued to cast votes against Villiers’s anti-corn law motions, his record on factory regulation and the new poor law, as well as his support for the 1845 Maynooth college bill, indicated that he would back Peel’s 1846 measure to repeal the corn laws, as indeed proved to be the case. A’Court endorsed the corn importation bill, opposed the factories bill, 22 May 1846, and was one of the Peelites who supported the Irish coercion bill, the defeat of which ejected Peel from the premiership, 25 June 1846.
Although A’Court initially stood his ground at the 1847 general election, he was forced to retire when local protectionists and agriculturalists brought forward Peel’s brother William Yates Peel.
I nevertheless feel compelled not to enter into a contest of which the result (from early exertions of the opposing party) might be very uncertain, and which would necessarily be attended with a considerable expense – an expense, which you are well aware, it would be most inconvenient for me to incur.
Copy of letter from A’Court to Charles A’Court, 4 June 1847, Add. 40598, ff. 315-16.
Irritated by the suggestion that he had secretly promised to retire in William Yates Peel’s favour, A’Court published an address, pointedly noting that he was ‘not responsible’ for the events that had ‘already so unfortunately disturbed the social relations in this borough’.
A’Court added the surname Repington to his own patronymic in 1847, belatedly complying with the terms of the 1837 Amington bequest.
