Thorold’s ancestors had been resident in Lincolnshire since the mid-sixteenth century. Sir William Thorold (c. 1591-1678) had been knighted by James I in 1607, aged only sixteen, and was created a baronet by Charles I shortly after the outbreak of the civil war.
At the nomination Thorold admitted that ‘he had gone away from the principles of his house’ but he did so ‘from sincere conviction’. He objected to the ballot, for he ‘did not believe an Englishman was afraid to give his vote’, and gave his support to the established church, though he ‘did not wish to oppress any man who differed from it’. He appeared to adopt a favourable position on reform of the franchise, insisting that it could be ‘extended slightly so that intelligent working men could come in’. Following a hard-fought campaign, he was returned at the top of the poll.
Thorold was a silent member, and is not known to have sat on any select committees. He attended frequently, though, and was steadfast in his support for the Conservative party. He voted against church rate abolition, 7 Mar. 1866, and opposed the Russell ministry’s reform bill, 27 Apr. 1866. He followed Disraeli into the division lobby on the major clauses of the representation of the people bill, apart from his vote in favour of cumulative voting, 5 July 1867. He opposed Gladstone’s resolution on the Irish church, 3 Apr. 1868, a policy that he felt was ‘a party move for party purposes’.
Thorold came forward to defend his seat at the 1868 general election and attacked Gladstone’s proposal for Irish church disestablishment, asking ‘how it can bring peace and contentment to Ireland I cannot imagine’.
Thorold died at his Scottish Highland residence in Applecross, where he frequently hunted deer, in October 1922.
