Hector, whose origins are obscure, had acted as steward at Petersfield for its absentee and eccentric Tory proprietor Hylton Jolliffe MP from the latter’s accession to the family’s estates in 1802 until February 1826.
An ‘ultra Liberal’, who is not known to have spoken in debate, Hector voted against Peel’s short-lived ministry on the address, the speakership and Irish Church appropriation, but sided with the agricultural interest over repeal of the malt tax.
Denounced at a Petersfield Tory meeting shortly before the 1837 general election as ‘a man whose democratic and revolutionary principles are dangerous to the very existence of the state’ and as ‘a man who would pull down the House of Lords and level in the dust all our best and noblest institutions, even the throne itself’, Hector issued an address asserting his support for the present ministry and the new Queen, and citing his recent appointment by Lord John Russell, the Whig leader in the Commons, to the inquiry on church lands, which he was confident would ‘put an end to those grounds of dissension which have so long existed between the Church and the Dissenters’.
Thereafter Hector resumed his regular presence in the lobbies, especially on minor issues, but his support for ministers on major divisions was less conspicuous during his second parliament. He was in the radical minorities for the immediate cessation of slave apprenticeships, 28 May 1838, for consideration of the Chartist petition, 12 July 1839, and against the creation of a poor law commission, 15 July 1839, 22 Mar. 1841. In 1839 his evidence as the former steward of the Jolliffes helped a high court case involving a tenant farmer go against them.
It has been suggested that the ‘excitement consequent upon the temporary stoppage of his banking-house’ in January 1842, when his partnership with Lacy was dissolved, may have contributed to his death the following month after ‘a few weeks’ illness’.
