Divett represented Exeter with an ‘unwearied regard for the interests of his constituency’ for over three decades.
Divett’s father and namesake came from a well-established Quaker family of London leather and wool merchants based in West Smithfield. His first cousin was Thomas Divett, who inherited the business in 1790, and later bought his way into Parliament, sitting for the pocket boroughs of Gatton, 1820-26, and Lymington, 1827-28.
Divett inherited Bystock on the death of his father in 1819, before which he appears to have joined him in business.
A regular attender, who made at least 120 known speeches in the Commons, Divett was among the ‘considerable number’ of advanced reformers who met to establish the Reform Association to promote Liberal registration activity in May 1835.
Divett, perhaps mindful of his own family’s religious heritage, was especially prominent in the campaign to relieve Dissenters of their grievances. A year after entering Parliament he introduced a motion against the compulsory payment of church rates, which prompted the Whig ministry to adopt their own measure, and throughout his career he continued to speak and divide steadily for the abolition of ‘this monstrous tax’.
Divett’s commitment to other ‘causes of civil and religious liberty’, a phrase he used when addressing the North Devon Grand Reform Festival in 1837, included support for the abolition of slavery, ending the use of capital punishment, and allowing women to hear debates in parliament.
Divett was also a fierce advocate of free trade ‘in the fullest meaning of the term’ and spoke and voted regularly against the protective duties on corn from 1833 onwards.
Significantly, it was not just the price of food that concerned him. Divett wanted trade with China and the East Indies to be opened up and the duties on imports from the colonies to be reduced.
From 1840 onwards many of Divett’s contributions in the Commons reflected his interest in South Australia, a non-convict colony founded to be free from political patronage and the established church.
Divett’s involvement in the colony began at a time when the ill-defined divisions of power between the colonial office in London and the board of colonisation commissioners in South Australia were presenting difficulties. He ‘counselled perseverance’ and ‘by assiduous attention and study of the complications which had arisen from divided authority, helped to bring that amount of government interference necessary alike for financial purposes and restoring regularity’.
Speaking in committee on the South Australian Acts, 15 Mar. 1841, Divett supported a loan guarantee of £210,000 from the government to South Australia, insisting that past investment had been good and that the House underestimated the resources of the colony, which included land ‘of the highest quality and advantageous for sheep farming’.
Divett spoke several times in the Commons about the legislation granting responsible government to Australia and successfully lobbied for South Australia to retain its independent identity, particularly in relation to New South Wales. On 22 April 1850, for instance, he warned that any federal assembly would be ‘inoperative as the outer colonies did not want the powerful legislature of Sydney to override them’, adding that ‘they were disposed to draw their connection closer with the mother country rather than with each other‘.
Divett was an increasingly lax attender by the 1850s, being present for 78 out of 257 divisions in the 1853 session and just 21 out of 198 in 1856.
In 1860 it was rumoured that Divett, a widower since 1856, would retire from politics on account of failing health, but he continued to represent Exeter until his death following a long illness in July 1864.
