Heron, ‘a somewhat obscure, though ... abundantly zealous ... Whig’, was a ‘quirky Lincolnshire squire, eternally frustrated in his ambition to represent his county in Parliament’.
At the 1832 general election Heron was returned unopposed for Peterborough through Lord Fitzwilliam’s interest. In the first reformed Parliament, which he described as ‘a very honest, but a very ignorant and a most disagreeable one’, he generally divided with Grey’s ministry, though he felt that Althorp, chancellor of the exchequer, had ‘not sufficient talents or vigour for his situation’.
Heron, an occasional attender who generally retired to his Lincolnshire estates in early June, rarely contributed to debate.
At the 1835 general election Heron, who declared that he was ‘still prepared to fight the battles of the people against a Tory administration’, was re-elected in second place.
Heron endured a difficult canvass at the 1837 general election, when his support for the poor law was severely criticised by his Conservative opponent, but, championing the good work he did as a guardian for the Newark Union, he was re-elected in second place.
At the 1841 general election Heron was once again returned in second place. He had little time for Peel’s ministry, describing the premier as a man of ‘no talents’ who sought ‘neither to disguise his despotism, nor conciliate his supporters’.
Looking back on his parliamentary career, Heron boasted:
I can reflect on my conduct, both public and private, with honest satisfaction; and as in nearly forty years spent in the House of Commons, I have neither received nor asked any favour from any administration, I think the merit of disinterestedness cannot be refused me.
His Notes were an eclectic mix of political and social commentary punctuated by rather prosaic observations on his ‘menagerie’ of exotic animals kept on his Stubton estate, near Grantham. John Wilson Croker, whom Heron had described as ‘one of the most determined jobbers’, savaged the work in the Quarterly Review, describing it as a ‘farrago of nonsense and libel’ written by a ‘crazy simpleton’.
Heron died suddenly in his library at Stubton in May 1854. His effects were valued under £7,000. He devised the estate to one George Neville, his residuary legatee, and directed his executors to sell the rest of his real estate.
