The Sibthorp family had strong political connections with Lincoln. John Sibthorp (1669-1718) was the first member of the family to be returned as its MP, and thereafter four generations represented the city in Parliament, with Sibthorp’s father, Charles de Laet Waldo Sibthorp (1783-1855) serving almost continuously from 1826 until his death. This electoral success was based on strong local loyalty to the family built up over a considerable period of time, though Charles Sibthorp’s fierce independence and diligence in the Commons certainly bolstered his position. His son, Gervaise, however, was to be the last member of the family who represented the city.
Sibthorp was educated at Harrow and Oxford, where he excelled at cricket, playing for his school and university, and subsequently for the Old Harrovians.
‘somewhat reserved in manner, arising from ill-health and a delicate organisation, he never, amongst a certain class of the constituency, acquired the popularity of his late father; but within his own more immediate circle of friends and neighbours his high intelligence, affability, and graceful manners were as highly appreciated as his generous thoughtfulness and kindness of heart rendered him esteemed and beloved’.
Morning Chronicle, 16 Oct. 1861.
Sibthorp was returned unopposed for Lincoln in January 1856 after his Liberal opponent withdrew. On the hustings, where he ‘appeared to be suffering from severe illness’, he noted the ‘ruin, misery and expenditure’ entailed by the Crimean war, to which he hoped for a speedy conclusion, but declared himself opposed to any ‘patched-up, trumpery peace’, and attacked ‘the “peace-at-any-price party”, whose whole soul and ideas appeared to be centered upon pounds, shillings, and pence’. He professed himself to be ‘a Conservative, but no party man’, reaffirmed his desire to see the church rates question settled, and voiced his support for administrative reform and for adjustments to income tax.
Whilst his father had had much to say in the Commons, Gervaise contributed very little, limiting himself to occasional questions, mostly on military and imperial matters. Typical of these interventions was his enquiry as to whether soldiers of illegitimate birth who had fought in the Crimea were being denied war medals sent by the French government, 8 Apr. 1856. On domestic matters, he confined himself to the relatively trivial, such as whether the government stored gunpowder in Waltham Abbey, 25 June 1857.
Initially at least Sibthorp was a moderately frequent attender, present for 77 out of 198 divisions in the 1856 session.
The last Sibthorp to represent Lincoln in Parliament died in harness in October 1861. The Times (and numerous other papers) erroneously recorded that upon leaving the house where he was staying near London, Sibthorp had been in conversation with Alexander Beresford-Hope and suddenly ‘fell into his arms and died’, a report which the latter refuted.
