On taking his seat in 1857, Glover was described as ‘not a bad-looking man… rather tall, stoutly made, and, on the whole, of passable appearance. He affected rather the swell – wore a hat with a curled brim, and a rather ponderous watch-chain’.
Glover’s family had been settled in Ireland since the seventeenth century, when his ancestor John Glover received estates in counties Cork and Limerick as a reward for military service.
Glover made the first of several abortive attempts to win an English parliamentary seat at the 1852 general election. He issued an address after meeting a Conservative deputation from Pontefract, but withdrew as his prospects appeared poor.
In August 1854 Glover, who had family connections to Kent, offered for a vacancy at Canterbury, where there was considerable confusion about his political affiliation. The Times reported that he had ‘announced himself as a Liberal-Conservative, but has since advocated Radical views’.
To his disappointment, Glover had not been asked to contest a vacancy at Beverley the previous month, one reason being that some election bills from 1852 remained unpaid.
Glover made yet another unsuccessful attempt to secure a seat at a by-election at Abingdon in December 1854. He ‘indignantly repelled’ reports that he had offered ‘at several places... professing any political creed that might happen to favour his success’, but nonetheless described himself as ‘a truly liberal and independent conservative’. He voiced his support for ending the Maynooth grant; admitting Dissenters to universities and exempting them from church rates; extending the franchise (but not the ballot); and education ‘sublimated by religion’.
Undeterred, Glover stood on his own account at the 1857 election, when he claimed to have declined invitations from two other constituencies.
Glover secured second place in the poll behind a Liberal, but faced an election petition.
Intending to offer at the by-election which followed his unseating, Glover issued ‘a somewhat vague address’, but subsequently withdrew, leaving the field clear for Henry Edwards as Conservative candidate.
Glover’s trial eventually took place at the Central Criminal Court in April 1858. The prosecution presented a similar case to that in the election petition, noting his Irish insolvency and arguing that the conveyance of the Kent properties to Glover, which took place when he offered for Canterbury, ‘was merely a sham, and was only done for electioneering purposes’, and that he was aware that they were heavily mortgaged.
Glover’s imprisonment produced ‘a strong feeling of sympathy’, from the knowledge that his was ‘by no means a solitary case’.
The persecution he had suffered became Glover’s main theme when he visited Beverley soon thereafter. Despite not arriving until midnight, he was greeted by ‘a salvo of cheers’, a brass band and a 1,000-strong crowd. Disclaiming ‘any egotism’ on his part, he contended that no other MP could have borne his ordeal ‘with such an undaunted heart... Were he but to tell them a tithe of what he had gone through, their blood would freeze with horror’. He described himself as ‘the victim of libel, of monied power, of envy, and of unjust accusations’. Although three other boroughs had invited him to become their candidate, he intended to contest Beverley at the next election.
At the 1859 general election Glover offered for Beverley ‘in the “Liberal Conservative” interest’.
