Hoy, or Barlow Hoy as he was sometimes known, had been serving as an assistant surgeon in the army medical corps in 1828 when a chance inheritance from a cousin transformed his life, providing him with extensive property in Hampshire and a ‘great fortune’ of almost £88,000.
At the 1832 general election Hoy stood for Southampton as a ‘Conservative’, promising to maintain the established church. Rebutting claims that he opposed all reform, he cited his votes for the enfranchisement of Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester in 1830, but denounced the secret ballot. After a stormy contest he was returned in second place amidst allegations of irregularities at the poll and talk of a petition.
Seeking to regain his seat at the 1835 general election, Hoy railed against the Whigs’ abortive church reforms and justified the dismissal of the ministry by the king. Most of his campaign, however, was spent denouncing the secret ballot: ‘Was public opinion not to have any influence ... was a voter to sneak privately to the poll and not let his neighbours know what he was doing?’, he demanded.
surprised to see those who had been foremost in exclaiming against corporations, on account of the secrecy of their proceedings, and the irresponsibility of their members ... coming forward as the advocates of a measure, the whole object of which was to secure the most complete secrecy, and the most perfect irresponsibility. He considered the elective franchise as a trust for the exercise of which the electors were responsible, not only to their fellow-townsmen but to the country at large; and he could not conceive, if public opinion were thought a necessary restraint on Members of that House, and a useful control upon the actions of all men, as far as regards the public welfare, why it should be less necessary in voting for Members.
Hansard, 2 June 1835, vol. 28, cc. 406-9.
He spoke and was in Peel’s minority for a £500 property qualification for town councillors, 30 June 1835, and on 1 July 1835 moved unsuccessfully for the new town council elections to ‘be taken openly’, in the same manner as parliamentary polls.
Hoy’s other interventions included opposing the oyster fisheries bill, 11 May 1836, and demanding military action to prevent the United States invading Mexican Texas and re-establishing slavery there, 5 Aug. 1836.
Towards the end of the 1837 session, Hoy ‘paired off’ with Pierce Butler, in order to take his wife to Spa in Belgium for her health.
Hoy’s accidental death in August 1843 attracted considerable publicity.
A tourniquet was applied by an ‘old friend’, Captain Meredith, but Hoy died from ‘lock jaw’ at the Hospice de Vieille the following day.
It has been suggested that the cost of contesting Southampton on five occasions in as many years must have contributed heavily to Hoy’s indebtedness, and it may also account for the abandonment of his political career and sojourns abroad.
