Marryat had assumed control of his family’s London business interests, which included the West Indian mercantile house of Marryat and Sons, committee membership of Lloyd’s, and a banking interest in Kay, Price, Marryat and Coleman, following his father’s death in 1824. Two years later he had occupied his father’s former seat at Sandwich, which he continued to represent until 1835 as an independently-minded Member, variously described as ‘moderate reformer’ and ‘radical’.
A convert to the Grey ministry’s reform bill, Marryat had campaigned steadily in the unreformed Commons on behalf of the West India interest, including the planters of Trinidad, for whom he became an unpaid agent from 1830 before falling out with them in August 1832, following his decision to endorse the ministerial order of November 1831 ameliorating slavery conditions in the British colonies.
A fairly active attender, who served on the 1833 Lithlingow election committee, Marryat gave general support to the Whigs on most other issues, but was not beyond charting an independent course.
Welcoming an abortive labour rate bill designed to address agricultural distress, 5 Aug. 1833, Marryat admitted that it was as ‘wrong to interfere between the farmer and the labourer as it would be to say to a manufacturer how many men he should employ’, but defended it ‘as a temporary palliative to an evil to which he should hope to see a more general and permanent remedy applied’. He was absent from the ensuing division on the issue, however. On 14 July 1834 he brought up a petition from the London Dock company against the London dock bill.
At that year’s unexpected dissolution Marryat initially stood for re-election at Sandwich, but with the substantial admiralty influence now in Conservative hands, he withdrew before the poll.
