Described by the marquess of Chandos as a man who ‘might truly and emphatically receive the title of true old English gentleman’, Kerrison was a distinguished Waterloo veteran who sat unopposed for the borough of Eye for nearly three decades.
First elected to the Commons as Member for Shaftesbury in 1813, Kerrison’s early political career had been disrupted by his service in the Peninsular campaigns, during which he received the gold medal for his gallantry at Orthes, where he was severely wounded, and the silver medal with two clasps for Sahagun, Benevente and Toulouse.
Despite early reports that he would be opposed at the 1832 general election by John Henniker, son of the prominent local landowner John Major Henniker, 3rd Baron Henniker, Kerrison, who issued a rather prosaic address highlighting his support for the agricultural interest and the ‘labouring classes’, was returned without opposition.
An occasional attender, Kerrison’s notable votes included support for currency reform, 24 Apr. 1833, Chandos’s resolution on agricultural distress, 26 Apr. 1833, and a repeal of the malt tax, 27 Feb. 1834, and against shorter parliaments, 15 May 1834.
Kerrison’s quiet and unremarkable first post-Reform Parliament set the tone for the rest of his career in the Commons. Re-elected without opposition in 1835, he voted with the ministerial minority on the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, and the address, 26 Feb. 1835. He opposed Irish church appropriation, 2 Apr. 1835, the defeat of which brought down Peel’s short-lived ministry, and thereafter gave silent support to the Conservative opposition on all the main issues of the day. His assertion at the 1837 general election that ‘if I am not an independent Member of Parliament, there is not one in England’ was therefore belied by his consistent voting record. His declaration that there had never been ‘a more contemptible administration’ than Melbourne’s also made it clear where his loyalties lay.
Kerrison was unwavering in his defence of agricultural protection at the 1841 general election, when, despite a concerted effort from local Liberals to get up a candidate, he was again re-elected unopposed.
Returned unopposed for Eye for the ninth and final time at the 1847 general election, when he maintained that protection to agriculture and industry was ‘indispensible to the prosperity of the Empire’, Kerrison was thereafter a seldom-seen figure at Westminster.
Although Kerrison made little impact within the walls of Westminster, he had been a major political player in the county of Suffolk. Significantly, he spent more time organising and funding the Conservative effort in the county division of Suffolk East than he did in Eye, where his return was never in doubt.
Kerrison died at his London residence at Great Stanhope Street in March 1853 after ‘only an hour’s illness’.
