The oldest MP to enter the Commons for the first time in 1832, the septuagenarian Barrett Lennard claimed to have been ‘a friend to reform from his earliest youth’, but was probably better known for his dedication to the turf. Mocked for his ‘senility’ and being in his ‘second childhood’ by local Tories, he sat as a moderately active Whig for one parliament alongside his more prominent elder son and namesake, with whom he attracted criticism for inadequately supporting the agricultural interest.
‘Low in stature’ and ‘thickset’, Lennard, who until 1786 had been known as Thomas Thomas,
On Dacre’s death, Lennard had assumed the surnames of Barrett and Lennard in accordance with his father’s will, and inherited substantial estates in county Monaghan, Norfolk and Essex, leaving him ‘a rich man’.
On the hustings in 1832 it was widely acknowledged that Lennard ‘had not in early life taken an interest in public affairs’.
“Sir Thomas Lennard, I have seen you at Southend; know me now as the Queen of England. As your Queen, then, I command you to afford me ingress to the church by that private door”.
“May it please your Majesty”, replied Sir Thomas, bowing at the same time very low, “though it is well known that I sympathize with your cause, the word of honour of an English gentleman ... must not be broken, all the royalty of Europe could not make me do so”.
G. F. Berkeley, My Life and Recollections (1866), iv. 173-5.
Lennard’s known political activities included attending an Essex county meeting to petition against agricultural distress, 8 May 1822, and chairing meetings in support of the Grey ministry’s reform bill during 1831.
Requested to come forward for the newly created division of Essex South by a clique of local reformers in 1832, Lennard’s claims to have served the cause of reform ‘all his life’ raised eyebrows, not least because at the 1830 county election he had nominated John Tyssen Tyrell, who had subsequently opposed reform.
Old age is not only remarkable for its garrulity, but its vanity, and painful it is to see a man entering upon the arena of political contention, at a time of life when his physical infirmities ought not to aspire beyond an easy chair and night cap.
Essex Standard, 3 Nov. 1832.
With his supporters insisting that he had no infirmities ‘either bodily or mental’ and that Tyrell had hoodwinked him on the issue of reform, Lennard agreed to stand, but refused to coalesce with a Whig colleague, fearing that to solicit ‘two votes’ would damage both candidates’ chances. In his address he backed reform of the church, the abolition of tithes, a reduction of all taxes, the abolition of slavery, and promised to protect the farming interest, to which he belonged. Returned in second place behind a Conservative after a two day poll, at the declaration he explained that it had not been his ‘intention’ to enter Parliament ‘so late in life’, but that he had ‘unwillingly submitted’ to the call, ‘hoping that some younger or more efficient man might offer’.
A fairly steady attender, Lennard divided with the Whig ministry on most major issues, usually alongside his son. An opponent of most radical initiatives, including the ballot, he was nevertheless in the minority to abolish military flogging, 2 Apr. 1833, 17 Mar. 1834. He is not known to have spoken in debate, but presented a number of constituency petitions, most notably against slavery, 22 Feb., 19 Apr., 6, 8 May 1833. Having voted for a reduction of the malt tax, 26 Apr., he turned tail and rallied behind ministers for its continuance after they made it an issue, 30 Apr. 1833.
At the 1835 general election Lennard retired from Essex South, ‘a contested election, not having for him any charms’, as the Tory press noted.
Lennard died the ‘oldest living baronet in the kingdom’, aged 95, in June 1857.
