Born at Netheravon House, Wiltshire, Hicks-Beach came from a mercantile family ‘of ancient lineage’, whose rise to political prominence began with Sir Michael Hicks (1543-1612), secretary to the lord treasurer, William Cecil, Lord Burghley, who purchased an estate at Beverston in Gloucestershire.
Having taken possession of his father’s estates, Hicks-Beach married in August 1832
Although he was a leading and ‘deservedly popular’ member of the Conservative party in Gloucestershire, Hicks-Beach professed that he ‘never had any ambition to come forward as a public man’. However, upon the elevation of the marquess of Worcester to the peerage he agreed to stand for East Gloucestershire in November 1853 upon ‘those old Conservative principles which he had always professed’.
During his brief time in the Commons Hicks-Beach does not appear to have spoken, sat on any committees or introduced any bills, but he was a regular attender. A ‘staunch member of the church of England’, he ‘considered religion should be the basis of all education’, and voted for the Manchester and Salford education bill, 21 Feb. 1854.
Hicks-Beach died suddenly in November 1854. He was succeeded by his eldest son Michael Hicks-Beach (1837-1916), MP for East Gloucestershire, 1864-85, and Bristol West, 1885-1906, who became a prominent Conservative politician and was created Earl St. Aldwyn in 1915.
