Dottin, a wealthy West India proprietor and prominent benefactor of numerous charities in Southampton, had sat for that venal borough as a ‘church and throne’ Tory until 1831, when he quit the field in the face of pro-reform sentiment and upped sticks, putting his ‘substantial’ mansion of Bugle Hall on the market.
A fairly lax attender who was listed in a press report about ‘Conservative negligence’ later that year, Dottin voted with Peel’s short-lived ministry on the speakership, 19 Feb., address, 26 Feb., and Irish church appropriation, 2 Apr. 1835.
Re-elected at the 1837 general election for Southampton, where he had resumed his residence and largesse, on the hustings Dottin denounced the Whig ministry’s attempts to ‘aim a death blow at the established institutions of the country’, and promised to support the ‘glorious constitution’ to ‘the latest hour of my life’.
After finally disposing of Bugle Hall around 1844, Dottin spent his retirement at Argyle Street, ‘in that privacy ... suitable for the closing days of an extended life’.
