A ‘canny Welshman’, whom Benjamin Disraeli considered ‘one of the oddest men that ever lived’, Lewis is probably best remembered today for bankrolling the future prime minister’s entry to Parliament.
Lewis had inherited entailed family estates in Wales and Gloucestershire from his clergyman father whilst still a minor. By 1798 he was a solicitor’s clerk and two years later had established his own practice at Pentyrch, near Cardiff, with a London agent.
Lewis apparently made no attempt to re-enter the Commons in 1830 and 1831, but at the 1832 general election he stood again for Maidstone, where his agents had been carefully attending to the new electoral registers.
In his third spell in the Commons Lewis was apparently silent in debate and rarely troubled the division lobbies, averaging less than 20 recorded votes per session. In an important reminder of the work performed by MPs that usually went unrecorded, however, his surviving papers suggest that he was fairly active in assisting his Maidstone constituents.
Lewis’s known constituency work included bringing up a Maidstone petition condemning the municipal reform bill, 14 July 1835, after he had voted against the bill’s attempt to abolish the freeman franchise, 23 June 1835.
Assisted by a well-publicised Christmas donation of £600 to the ‘necessitous inhabitants’ of Maidstone in 1836,
Lewis’s public munificence at Maidstone was evidently not matched by a similar largesse at home. Inclined towards parsimony, he refused to assist his wife’s impecunious brother Major John Viney Evans with his financial woes. ‘His fondness for money is to me unaccountable’, she apologised to her brother.
Mrs Lewis’s extra-marital affairs remain the subject of historical speculation, particularly the extent of her involvement with Disraeli before her husband’s death.
Under the terms of Lewis’s will of 23 Aug. 1833, the bulk of his estate, valued for probate at a staggering £120,000, 9 Apr. 1838, was divided between his widow during her lifetime, providing her with an income of about £5,000 a year, and his brother, the Rev. William Price Lewis, who inherited all his Dowlais shares and banking stocks.
On 28 Aug. 1839 Mrs Lewis married Disraeli, twelve years her junior, and began funding his political career. She was rewarded with the rare honour of a peerage in her own right four years before her own death in 1872.
