Tapps, an eccentric and ‘opulent’ philanthropist given to staging merrie England frolics with his tenantry, had made no mark in the unreformed House following his purchase of a seat for the ‘pocket borough’ of New Romney.
Tapps rallied behind the Whig ministry on the address, 4 Feb. 1833, but thereafter barely attended and made no known speeches - his only other confirmed vote of this session being in the radical minority for repeal of the window tax, 30 Apr. 1833, though he was also credited with one against the property tax.
Absent from the parliamentary record for the 1836 and 1837 sessions, at the 1837 general election Tapps, who was by now regarded as a ‘liberal reformer’ in Tory papers, announced his retirement.
In April 1836 it had been reported that Tapps was about to ‘lay out a large sum in the formation of entirely new watering place on the coast’, located between Christchurch and Poole.
Tapps also attracted publicity for local acts of charity, such as his donation of £40 to the girls of the National School for new clothing, following which the local paper hoped that he would cast his ‘kindly eye’ on the boys as well.
Tapps died in his 45th year at Hinton Admiral, 27 Aug. 1842.
