Described by a contemporary as a man ‘who cared little or nothing about party’, Harvey briefly represented Thetford as a self-declared ‘independent member’, though he sat with the Conservatives in the Commons.
The Crown Bank, known officially as the Harvey and Hudson Bank, had been founded in 1792 by Harvey’s great-grandfather, Robert, and at its height in the mid-nineteenth century, it had over twenty-five branches across Norfolk and Suffolk.
Harvey first attempted to enter Parliament at the 1863 Thetford by-election, when he contested the vacancy created by the succession of William Fitzroy, the earl of Euston, as the sixth duke of Grafton. Having initially declined a requisition from electors to stand in opposition to the Liberal candidate, the sixth duke of Grafton’s younger brother Lord Frederick Fitzroy, he finally acquiesced on the eve of the poll and issued an address calling for legislative changes ‘conceived and carried out in a Conservative spirit’.
Harvey offered again for Thetford at the 1865 general election, issuing an address that did little to shed further light on his political affiliations.
I have not been an extreme politician, nor do I class myself with any political party; I believe that an independent representative best serves political interests, and at a moment when the nation is happily free from political antagonism, every good citizen ... should support such measures as ... conduce to public welfare, irrespective of the party from which they emanate.
Bury and Norwich Post, 4 July 1865.
Due to ‘indisposition’ Harvey neither canvassed personally nor appeared at the nomination, but, with the Grafton interest declining to bring forward their own candidate at a general election for the first time in the post-Reform era, he was returned at the top of the poll by a clear majority.
An occasional attender, Harvey sat with the Conservative opposition in the Commons, but used his maiden speech to give support to the Liberal ministry’s reform bill on the grounds that it leant ‘towards Conservative ideas’. Justifying his decision, he apologised for ‘acting in opposition to the general opinion of his party’ while claiming a right to pursue ‘a perfectly independent course’, 27 Apr. 1866. However, on the subsequent division on the £7 rental qualification, he voted for the Adullamite amendment in favour of rating, 18 June 1866, the success of which brought down the Liberal government. In the following session he spoke in support of the Derby ministry’s representation of the people bill and attacked Gladstone’s assertion that Thetford should be disenfranchised as it was not a borough but a ‘cluster of villages’, 25 Mar. 1867. Thereafter he followed Disraeli into the division lobby on the major clauses of the bill. In his two other known contributions to debate, he pressed the home secretary to allow the swearing in of London tradesmen as special constables for the Hyde Park reform demonstrations, 3 May 1867, and criticised the Scottish reform bill for proposing to reduce the number of MPs from English boroughs, 25 May 1868.
Thetford’s disenfranchisement in 1868 left Harvey without a parliamentary seat, but he was compensated with a baronetcy in November that year.
Distraught and humiliated by the collapse of his family bank, Harvey shot himself through the chest with a revolver at his residence at Crown Point on 15 July 1870. He died four days later.
