The Tudway family, formerly London merchants, had been established in Wells since the 17th century.
Tudway left Oxford without taking a degree and devoted himself to the management of his property and to country pursuits. He was a popular master of foxhounds and had a reputation as a good sportsman.
Tudway’s conciliatory language on the free trade question in April and his statement in July raised doubts about his political allegiance. Some newspapers listed him as a Liberal-Conservative rather than a ministerialist,
A lax attender, Tudway is not known to have spoken in debate and one of his obituaries noted that he ‘had not taken any active or prominent part in Parliamentary business’.
Tudway served regularly as a magistrate and on the grand jury in Somerset.
