A scion of the High Tory aristocracy, Ingestre was a Conservative loyalist during his Commons career. His father Henry John Chetwynd-Talbot (1803-68), viscount Ingestre (I), had represented Hertford, Armagh and Dublin in the unreformed Parliament, and was Conservative MP for South Staffordshire from 1837 until succeeding his father as 3rd Earl Talbot in 1849.
When a vacancy arose in South Staffordshire, his father’s old constituency, in 1854, Ingestre was selected as the Conservative candidate and hastily returned from his travels in the United States.
In his first parliament Ingestre voted with the Conservative leadership on most issues, and was in the majority that turned out Palmerston’s government on the conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858. He made a number of brief spoken contributions, including on industrial schools, building new army barracks and the mining operations of the duchy of Lancaster, 17 June 1857, 15 Feb. 1858, and 11 May 1858.
Ingestre supported Ducane’s amendment criticising the Anglo-French commercial treaty, 24 Feb. 1860, and the following year complained that his middle-class constituents would prefer a reduction in income tax rather than the repeal of paper duties proposed by Gladstone’s budget.
Despite his father’s territorial interest, Ingestre suffered from ‘unpopularity’ in his constituency, which contributed to his defeat at the 1865 general election.
Shrewsbury ‘frequently attended meetings in connection with Conservative institutions and Church defence’ and was appointed to the royal household, as captain of the honourable corps of gentlemen at arms, by Disraeli in 1875, and made a privy councillor in the same year.
