A Conservative scion of a famously Foxite family, Foley offered solid support for ‘constitutional principles’ during his decade in the reformed Commons, but was well-respected by all parties in Herefordshire. The Liberal Hereford Times confessed that if one of the county’s three MPs had to be a Tory it might as well be Foley, given his character and popularity, although it added that ‘it was a grievous sight to see a Foley at the head of the Tory band’.
A direct descendant of Richard Foley, a Stourbridge ironmaster who had amassed a ‘considerable fortune’, Foley’s father Edward (1747-1803) was Whig MP for Droitwich, 1768-74, and Worcestershire, 1774-1803.
Foley was returned unopposed for Herefordshire at the 1832 general election, after promising to uphold the agricultural interest.
Foley does not appear to have spoken or served on any select committees after 1832. His voting behaviour in the first two sessions of the reformed Commons is difficult to discern, as he rarely appears in the surviving lists of minorities. He did, however, support Ingilby’s motion for the repeal of malt duty, 27 Feb. 1834. Charles Dod described him as a Conservative in favour of agricultural protection, while another contemporary parliamentary guide categorised him as a Tory.
Foley divided with Peel’s Conservatives in the key party divisions of the ensuing session on the speakership, the address and Russell’s Irish church resolutions, 19, 26 Feb., 2 Apr. 1835. He supported the marquess of Chandos’s motions for agricultural relief, 25 May 1835, 27 Apr. 1836, and paired off in favour of Edward Stillingfleet Cayley’s proposal for a silver standard, 1 June 1835. He opposed Irish church and municipal reform and the Whig ministers’ scheme to settle church rates in 1837.
Returned unopposed at the 1837 general election, thereafter Foley offered staunch opposition to repeal of the corn laws and Irish church appropriation, as well as supporting Henry Goulburn for the speakership, 27 May 1839. He retired at the 1841 dissolution, citing ill-health, after voting in the majorities which defeated Baring’s budget and passed the no confidence motion in Melbourne’s administration, 18 May, 4 June 1841.
Foley died in 1846, having ‘for some time been in a declining state of health, which baffled the skill of the most eminent physicians, and terminated in a general breaking up of his constitution’.
These land holdings enabled the ‘excellent and noble proprietoress of Stoke Edith’ to wield considerable electoral influence in county elections.
The high esteem in which his lordship’s noble sister, the Lady Emily Foley, is so universally held, has been found to operate as a most potent influence, not only in the district immediately around this city, but in a more distant parts of the county, where her ladyship’s deserved “popularity” has stood her brother in good stead.
Hereford Journal, 8 Dec. 1858.
On the death of Lady Emily in 1900, Stoke Edith and a personal estate of £48,994 passed to Paul Foley, her great-nephew, whose father, Henry John Wentworth Hodgetts Foley, was Liberal MP for Staffordshire South, 1859-68.
