One of the four sons of the 5th duke of Beaufort who had held seats in the unreformed parliament, Lord Edward Somerset (as he was known) was a distinguished military officer who had commanded the household brigade of cavalry at Waterloo. He had sat in eight parliaments as a Conservative and follower of Pitt and Lord Liverpool until 1831.
Somerset was appointed surveyor-general of ordnance in December 1834, and shortly afterwards at a local meeting he expressed his support for the construction of the Great Western Railway, promising to give it his ‘utmost parliamentary support’. At the 1835 general election he pledged to uphold ‘the ancient institutions under which the country had acquired honour and prosperity’ and was returned at Cirencester in second place after being challenged by a reformer.
Somerset does not appear to have spoken in the Commons at this period, and did not sit on any select committees or introduce any bills. He supported Charles Manners Sutton for the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, and voted for the address, 26 Feb. He divided against Lord Chandos’s motion to repeal the malt tax, 10 Mar., and opposed Lord John Russell’s motions on Irish Church temporalities, 2, 7 Apr. He backed Sir William Follett’s attempts to protect the voting rights of freemen from the operation of the Municipal Corporations Act, 23 June, 16 July.
In the following session he opposed Spring Rice’s resolution for the abolition of church rates, 15 Mar., 23 May 1837, and divided against the third reading of the Irish municipal corporations bill, 11 Apr. He had been mentioned as a future candidate for West Gloucestershire in December 1835, but retired at the 1837 general election.
