A Catholic ‘country gentleman of respectability’, Chester possessed ‘a good landed estate’ in counties Louth and Meath.
Chester had long been active in local politics when he became a member of the Louth Independent Club in 1826, which was established to register Catholic freeholders and ‘open’ the representation of the county.
At the 1835 general election Chester proposed the leading Irish Whig, Sir Patrick Bellew, for County Louth, and shortly after chairing a meeting of local Liberal MPs at Dundalk in January 1837, was appointed as high sheriff.
A silent member, Chester does not appear to have sat on any select committees or introduced any bills. His attendance in the Commons was intermittent, and he voted in only 95 divisions in his three sessions in parliament. He did not divide at all in the autumn session which followed his return, but recorded his first vote in support of Daniel O’Connell’s opposition to the Irish poor law bill, 9 Feb. 1838. He attended closely to the committee stage of this bill, and voted with O’Connell in several minorities over the following weeks. Although listed in one parliamentary guide as a ‘Whig’, he regularly voted ‘on the side of Liberal principles’, and twice divided in favour of the ballot, 15 Feb. 1838 & 18 June 1839.
Chester does not appear to have returned to Westminster until mid-April 1839, after which he backed the Whig ministry in a number of important divisions on matters such as the administration of Ireland, 19 Apr. 1839, the government of Jamaica, 6 May & 10, 19 June, the speakership, 27 May, and education, 20 June 1839. Returning early for the 1840 session, he joined other Whigs in opposing an annual grant of £30,000 to the prince consort, 27 Jan. 1840, and backed the ministry in the confidence motion, 31 Jan. 1840. He did not divide again until 8 May 1840 and, having voted against Lord Stanley’s Irish registration bill, 19 & 20 May, and against Villiers’s motion for a committee to consider the corn laws, 26 May, cast his last vote in the Commons on 29 May 1840, when he supported the ministry’s Canada bil.
By now Chester was regarded in his constituency as an ‘honest … useful and patriotic’ representative. On 14 July 1840 he took the Chiltern Hundreds, and in a brief address at the return of his successor, informed the electors that his declining health ‘prevented him from longer encountering the protracted nightly sittings in the House of Commons’.
Chester remained active in politics, however, chairing a dinner for the Irish chief secretary, Sir William Somerville, at Drogheda in September 1840, and at the 1841 general election proposing the re-adoption of Richard Montesquieu Bellew as a Liberal representative for the county and seconding his nomination.
Chester died at the ‘patriarchal age of 78’ at his residence in Kingstown, co. Dublin in February 1855, and was buried in Termonfeckin old graveyard.
