Perpetually dogged by poor health, Pierrepont, styled viscount Newark, had a perfunctory parliamentary career. He was the eldest son of the 2nd Earl Manvers, one of Nottinghamshire’s wealthiest landowners. Manvers, an anti-Catholic Tory and former naval officer renowned for his ‘amiable, open sailor like habits’, represented Nottinghamshire from 1801 until his succession in 1816, which brought to an end the family’s 38-year occupation of one of the county’s seats.
Newark was first returned for East Retford in 1830, ostensibly as an independent. The radical Nottingham Review, which counted him as a supporter of Wellington, thought little of his abilities, and condemned his over-confident acceptance speech, commenting that he:
either must or ought to be aware that nursery tales are not always accounted as wit, nor is swearing to be taken for a sign of good sense.
Nottingham Review, 30 Aug. 1830.
His first speech in the Commons, however, revealed him to be an advocate of the Grey ministry’s reform bill. Re-elected in 1831, he remained loyal to the government on most major issues, though he opposed the creation of single member constituencies.
At the 1832 general election Newark stood as a Reformer and was returned in second place, alongside his uncle, Granville Venables Harcourt Vernon, comfortably defeating the Tory John Beckett, the former judge advocate general.
In his only known Commons speech of the post-Reform era, he stated his opposition to a lower fixed duty on corn, arguing that its effect:
would be to throw all the poor lands of the kingdom out of cultivation; nor was it certain that any foreign supply would be either regular or abundant, or that any advantage to be derived to the manufacturer would compensate for the mischief of throwing so large a portion of the agricultural poor out of employ.
Hansard, 17 May 1833, vol. 17, cc. 1362-4.
Following the dissolution in 1834, Newark announced his intention to retire from Parliament, citing ill-health.
Newark died whilst residing at Torquay in August 1850.
