A scion of the High Tory aristocracy and a strong Protestant and protectionist, Ingestre was the heir to the earldom of Talbot, and related to the Cecils, marquesses of Salisbury, and Legges, earls of Dartmouth. His Anglo-Irish relations, including the Hills, marquesses of Downshire and the Beresfords, marquesses of Waterford, were staunch defenders of the Protestant Ascendancy. A regular contributor to naval debates, Ingestre was an indefatigable champion of the dubious inventions of ‘Captain’ Warner that would supposedly revolutionise naval warfare. Before the death of his elder brother, Ingestre had pursued a naval career, which was perhaps where he picked up his rough manners. The Tory diarist William Dyott described Ingestre as ‘a shallow man, and in his profession, tyrannical; his manners neither courteous nor highly polished’.
He is a violent Tory and passes for a rough surly man … However he was extremely cordial and insisted on introducing me to his wife, an agreeable and rather handsome young woman, with whom I had some pleasant chat.
Thomas Babington Macaulay to Mrs. Charles Trevelyan, 6 Sept. 1843, The letters of Thomas Babington Macaulay, ed. T. Pinney (1977), iv. 150.
Ingestre was first returned to Parliament in 1830, representing Hertford on the Cecil interest, and then sat in quick succession for Armagh and Dublin city. In the unreformed Parliament he was categorised as an Ultra Tory anti-reformer.
Ingestre was absent for the 1837 general election, when, after a fierce contest, he was elected in second place for South Staffordshire.
Ingestre was returned unopposed in a controversial compromise with his Whig colleague at the 1841 general election, having earlier denounced ‘the confederate band of Infidelity, Socialism, Whig Radicalism, Popery, and God knows what’ that supported Melbourne’s government.
Ingestre was absent from the votes on Peel’s 1842 revision of the corn laws, but backed the reintroduction of income tax and opposed Napier’s motion to exempt naval officers, 29 Apr. 1842.
Ingestre remained a vocal presence in navy debates throughout the 1840s. He lobbied for an improved system of promotion as part of a general reform of naval pay, pensions and employment, 4 Mar. 1842, 16 May 1843.
Ingestre succeeded his father as 3rd Earl Talbot in early 1849 and held a household appointment in Derby’s 1852 government. Although Warner was now widely viewed as a charlatan, on 30 Jan. 1852, Talbot wrote to the Times, to argue that ‘by the Warner Inventions the largest ships may be instantaneously, certainly, and cheaply destroyed’.
Shrewsbury was appointed to a ‘not very laborious office’ in the royal household in Derby’s second ministry, 1858-9.
He had so managed his affairs, that though with the title he came into at least £40,000 a year, all on which he could lay his hands was gone, and it was only by the assistance of his friends that he was able to live in England. How he brought about this result no one knows, for he lived poorly, but he had a passion for speculations of all kinds, and was the dupe of every projector who came to him with a plausible story. … I believe that the bulk of his property was so settled that he could not greatly injure it.
Disraeli, Derby and the Conservative party, 334 (5 June 1868).
He was succeeded by his eldest son, Charles John Chetwynd-Talbot, viscount Ingestre (1830-77), Conservative MP for Stafford, 1857-9, North Staffordshire, 1859-65, and Stamford, 1868. Two of his other sons became MPs: Walter Cecil Chetwynd-Talbot (later Carpenter, 1834-1904), Conservative MP for Co. Waterford, 1859-65, and Reginald Arthur James Talbot (1841-1929), MP for Stafford, 1869-74, and governor of Victoria, 1904-8.
