Sclater-Booth’s family origins can be traced to the Gloucestershire family of Slaughter. They came to Hampshire in the early eighteenth century when his great grandfather, Richard Sclater, an alderman of London, married Magdalen Limbrey of Tangier Park and Hoddington House, a relative modest estate of 1,300 acres at Upton Grey near Odiham.
Born George Sclater in London, he won the gold medal for Latin verse at Winchester before graduating in 1847 with a second in Classics from Oxford, where he was chiefly conspicuous for his rowing. Though he subsequently joined the Western circuit, having been called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1851, he never seems to have envisaged the law as a serious career. Qualifying as a county magistrate on 30 June 1856, the following months would determine his future decisively.
Sclater-Booth quickly set the standards by which he would make his mark in the Commons. In 1857 he took part in an impressive 86 divisions. These included opposing the secret ballot, 30 June, and the second reading of the married womens’ property bill, 15 July 1857, though unlike his Conservative colleague, Beach, he did vote for the second reading of the divorce bill, 24 July. On 2 July he divided with the minority against £22,615 being used to defray the expenses of a National Gallery; five days later he found himself in another radical cohort supporting the abolition of the office of lord lieutenant of Ireland. Thereafter, however, he was a regular and reliable supporter of the Conservative leaders on most issues. In 1858 his name appeared in 102 divisions. By then he was serving on the select committee on East India (transport of troops).
Back at Westminster, Sclater-Booth continued to impress with his level of attendance, averaging nearly 60 divisions per year. He also served on a succession of select committees. These included those on the Clare election petition, public institutions (both 1860), the 1861 cadastral survey, the 1863 Lisburn election petition, the registration of county voters, Barnstaple election petition, turnpike trusts, sewage in the metropolis (all 1864), and the chemists and druggists bill (1865).
Sclater-Booth also became an increasingly frequent contributor to debates during the 1859 parliament. On 1 Mar. 1860 this included lending his support to Gladstone’s tariff reductions. On 4 July 1861, he stood up for Aldershot in his constituency in a debate on supply, though the following year, on 2 May, he was voicing concern at the behaviour of troops in and around its barracks. On 8 July 1863 he spoke briefly as one of the sponsors of the poisoned grain prohibition bill.
Despite, or rather because of, this impressive parliamentary profile, Sclater-Booth found himself facing a serious challenge at the 1865 general election: North Hampshire’s Liberals were more or less explicit that it was his seat, not William Beach’s, which they sought. The charge was that he had behaved factiously in opposing Palmerston. Sclater-Booth denied it, though he did admit that he had opposed the prime minister over the Schleswig-Holstein question and duly supported Disraeli’s unsuccessful censure motion on the issue, 8 July 1864.
Sclater-Booth would further consummate his growing reputation in the 1865 parliament. As well as being present at well over 125 divisions in both 1867 and 1868, he served on a continuing range of select committees, including those on mines, turnpike trusts, the East London water bills, the Oxford and Cambridge universities education bill (all 1867), as well as the 1867-8 inquiry on the Shannon River.
In 1868, of course, Sclater-Booth’s best remembered years still lay ahead of him, for he would become president of the local government board in Disraeli’s second ministry. Though not in cabinet, he would play a key role in piloting the 1875 Public Health and Sale of Food and Drugs Acts through Parliament.
Away from Parliament, Sclater-Booth was a keen shot and huntsman, as well as being acknowledged as a competent amateur artist. He was on the governing body of Winchester College and the first official verderer of the New Forest following the 1877 New Forest Act. In 1888 he was the obvious choice to serve as the first chairman of the newly-created Hampshire County Council, a position he filled until he retired in March 1894.
It was, however, universally agreed that Sclater-Booth was no great orator. His specialist interest in local affairs, and administration more generally, were hardly conducive to it. Lord Randolph Churchill with memorable irony on one occasion, ‘entertained the strongest objection to the President of the Local Government Board coming down to the House with all the appearance of a great law-giver - to reform according to his ideas, and to improve, in his little way, the leading features of the British Constitution’.
Sclater-Booth was buried alongside his wife at Upton Grey, Hampshire and succeeded in his peerage and estates by his eldest son, George Limbrey Sclater-Booth (1860-1919), then a captain in the 1st royal dragoons.
