Tollemache, or Talmash, whose party allegiance was ambiguous, sat for five years as MP for Grantham before emigrating to New Zealand, where he amassed an immense fortune in land speculation, for which he is best known. He was the youngest son of Sir William Manners, MP for Ilchester, 1803-4 and 1806-7, who, following the death without issue of his uncle, Wilbraham Tollemache, 6th earl of Dysart, in 1821, was styled Lord Huntingtower and took the name Tollemache in lieu of Manners.
At the 1832 general election Tollemache was again brought forward on his father’s interest for Grantham. Although nominally standing as a Conservative, his election speeches gave little away in terms of party allegiance. He called for the abolition of slavery, but insisted that ‘the first approach to this desirable consummation was an honest discharge of the claims of the planters’, and he gave his support for church reform, ‘particularly pluralities’, although he declared that he would never ‘agree to any appropriation of one shilling’.
Like his brothers, Tollemache is not known to have spoken in debate, and his infrequent attendance in his first Parliament makes it difficult to discern his party loyalties. He backed Grey’s administration on Irish coercion, 11 Mar. 1833, but was in the minorities for scrutiny of the pension list, 18 Feb. 1834, and repeal of the malt tax, 27 Feb. 1834. He is not known to have sat on any select committees.
Declaring that he ‘pledged himself to support measures not men’, Tollemache’s speeches at the 1835 general election did little to clarify his position. At the hustings, he merely reiterated his wish to abolish church pluralities whilst resolutely opposing appropriation of its revenues.
We are reluctant to give Peel the benefit of Mr Talmash’s vote, which has generally been that of a Reformer; and yet we cannot rely on it for the purposes of opposition.
Examiner, 8 Feb. 1835.
The 1835 Parliamentary Test Book described Tollemache as a ‘Reformer’, while Dod’s 1836 Parliamentary Companion listed him as a ‘moderate reformer.
Following his retirement from the Commons, Tollemache focused his energies on investing in New Zealand Company settlements. A significant shareholder in the company, he purchased land in Wellington in 1839, and in 1841 sponsored a group of seven labourers from his Ham estates in Surrey to emigrate there.
Tollemache died without issue at Wickhouse, his residence in Richmond Hill, Surrey, in January 1892, following a bout of pneumonia.
