Rolleston, one of Nottinghamshire’s most assiduous magistrates, was a ‘consistent Conservative’ who represented the southern division of the county for over a decade.
At the 1837 general election Rolleston offered as a Conservative for Nottinghamshire South after being presented with a requisition containing over 1,200 signatures from 97 parishes. Backed by a highly organised election committee, a canvass in July revealed that he would comfortably defeat his whig opponent and substantial landowner, John Evelyn Denison, prompting the latter to retire. Rolleston’s unopposed return subsequently became ingrained in local political memory, with Conservative candidates framing it as an example of small freeholders overcoming the vested interests of the large estates.
A frequent attender, Rolleston divided with the Conservatives on most major issues. He backed the motion blaming the Whig government for the Canadian rebellion, 7 Mar. 1838 and opposed the ministry’s Irish tithes bill, 15 May. 1838. An ardent protectionist, he was against Villiers’ motion on the corn laws, 18 Mar. 1839. He voted for Peel’s motion of no confidence in the Whig ministry, 4 June 1841.
Rolleston appears to have spoken little in his first Parliament, intervening only in matters directly affecting Nottinghamshire. In a debate on the ecclesiastical duties and revenues bill, his motion to stop ‘the benefices in the patronage of the prebendaries’ in the church of Southwell being vested in the bishops of Ripon and Manchester was defeated 77-17, 6 July 1840. The following year he spoke in defence of the Basford Union, where he was an ex officio guardian, which had been under scrutiny following the death of a man who had been sent to the workhouse to receive medical attention, 22 Mar., 26 Mar. 1841.
Returned unopposed at the 1841 general election, Rolleston gave his unwavering support to Peel’s ministry. He voted against Lord John Russell’s motions not to reintroduce income tax, 13 Apr. 1842, and on the redress of Irish grievances, 12 July 1843. He supported the government’s railway bill, 11 July 1844, which proposed greater state regulation of the railways, and later called for more legislation to protect against railway companies who had ‘unduly invaded private property and ornamented grounds’, 14 Mar. 1845. More vocal in his second Parliament, he defended the measures magistrates had taken to suppress outbreaks of violence in Midland manufacturing towns, 28 Mar. 1843, and insisted that boards of guardians were ‘infinitely better judges’ than poor law commissioners in regulating trades and apprenticeships, 5 July 1844. He sat on the 1842 Blackburn election committee and the 1844 select committee on custom house frauds.
Rolleston backed Peel’s sliding scale on corn duties, 9 Mar. 1842, but remained a zealous supporter of protection. On the debate on the customs and corn importation report, he declared that he ‘could not understand’ any reason why the ‘present protection’ should be reduced, arguing that such a measure would do little to help the hosiery trade, 13 May 1846. He voted against Peel in the crucial divisions on corn law repeal, 27 Mar., 15 May 1846.
Though unwaveringly loyal to the protectionists, Rolleston worked closely with the Radical Thomas Duncombe to introduce the lace factories bill, which aimed to establish greater regulation of child employment, 20 May 1846. Explaining the bill, Rolleston argued that, from his experiences as chairman of the quarter sessions, young children employed in lace factories during the night were likely to be involved in criminal activities, such as robbery, in the early hours of the morning. However, the motion for a second reading was defeated 151-66, and the bill came to nothing.
At the 1847 general election Rolleston reiterated his staunch support for protection, outlined his opposition to the endowment of the Catholic clergy, and was re-elected without opposition.
Rolleston died at Lansdowne Place, Brighton in May 1862. His effects were valued at under £100.
