St. Paul was born at St. Ninians, Wooler, Northumberland in 1812, the youngest child and only son of Sir Horace St. Paul, ‘one of the senior Colonels in the Army’ and ‘a sporting country gentleman’ who had once been ‘one of the Prince of Wales’s set’.
The father’s parliamentary ambitions thenceforth passed to the son, who contested East Worcestershire as a Conservative ‘unpledged’ to any particular policy in 1835. Dismissed by the Liberal press as ‘a young, raw, inexperienced youth, fresh from Oxford’, he declined to ‘enter into a description of any particular principles’, but expressed a ‘strong attachment to the Church and State, to the King and Constitution’, and referred electors to ‘the excellent address of Sir Robert Peel to his constituents at Tamworth’.
This experience ‘bound’ St. Paul to what he came to regard as the ‘most “Old-English” constituency in the empire’.
St. Paul committee service was confined into election petitions, sitting on the Belfast, Tamworth and Woodstock election committees between February and June 1838.
St. Paul is not known to have spoken in the House, but in October 1838 explained to his constituents that although ‘the walls of St. Stephen’s’ had ‘never heard [his] voice’, this did not detract from his value as their representative. He regarded it as ‘an unpardonable presumption in any young and inexperienced member to address the House’, and recounted that he had seen ‘some young and ambitious Members make their maiden speeches at great length’ only to leave the House ‘with very different countenances from what they had when they came in’.
In October 1840 St. Paul inherited the titles and substantial Northumberland estate of his father, and through his mother (d. 26 Jan. 1837), came into possession of Ellowes Hall, near Dudley.
In the Commons, St. Paul voted against Lord Morpeth’s Irish registration bill, 25 Feb., 29 Apr 1841, and joined other Protectionists in backing Sandon’s motion condemning the duty on foreign sugar, 18 May 1841. Having supported the motion of no confidence in the Whig ministry, 31 Jan. 1840, he voted for Peel’s motion which brought the government down, 4 June 1841. At the dissolution he offered again as a Protectionist, 10 June, pledging to defend the agricultural interest ‘without causing injury to the manufacturer’, and arguing that British farmers not only provided much-needed employment to ‘English, Scottish and Irish labourers … in preference to the foreigner’, but also protected the country from dependence on imported corn. He was, however, forced to retire owing to ‘suddenly increased illness’.
Although he had no further wish to be in parliament, St. Paul remained involved in the politics of East Worcestershire. Wedded to protectionism, he railed against any compromise with the Whigs at the by-election of January 1847, but ultimately accepted the arrangement for the sake of party unity.
In later life St. Paul involved himself in promoting education and religious teaching ‘among all classes of the community’, his half yearly ‘rent dinners’ for local clergy, scholars and members of his tenantry being served ‘without intoxicating liquors’.
