‘Of slight build, with delicate fine-cut features, and a singularly incisive utterance’, the scholarly and well-travelled Pollington sat twice as a Conservative for Pontefract until his father’s financial difficulties forced him to abandon an unremarkable parliamentary career.
Pollington’s father, the Tory third earl of Mexborough, held an Irish peerage, but came from a Yorkshire family ‘of ancient descent and considerable influence’,
At the 1831 election, though not quite of age, Pollington was returned for Gatton on the interest of his cousin, Baron Monson. Like his father he divided against the Grey ministry’s reform bill.
Pollington was at Constantinople when Mexborough announced in December 1834 that his son would offer for Pontefract at the general election.
Never an assiduous attender, Pollington missed the division on the speakership, 19 Feb., but had returned home via Malta in time to vote with the Conservatives on the address, 26 Feb. 1835.
Pollington did not seek re-election in 1837, instead resuming his travels. His account of Syria in 1838 was published by the Royal Geographical Society.
At the 1841 election Pollington offered again at Pontefract, where his proposer lauded him as ‘a man of steady consistency and principle’ and cited his family’s local benevolence. An opponent of free trade,
Pollington, although not a regular speaker, was more active in this Parliament than previously, particularly as the corn laws came to the fore.
Pollington noted in 1846 that he had given ‘a firm, but... not a blind support to Her Majesty’s Government’, being unafraid to enter the opposite lobby.
Pollington subsequently opposed Peel in the critical vote on the Irish coercion bill, 25 June 1846, and attended a banquet for Stanley and Bentinck the following month.
In December 1846 Pollington announced that he would step down at the dissolution, noting that ‘the circumstances which have compelled me most unwillingly to retire... are too well known... to require any explanation’.
Pollington did consider offering elsewhere at the 1847 election, and got as far as putting his address to Canterbury’s electors in print, before withdrawing.
Poor health meant that Pollington was still in Italy when his father died in December 1860, and did not return home for the funeral.
On the duke of Northumberland’s death in January 1899, Mexborough became the sole survivor of the unreformed Commons.
