Elwes, who sat very briefly as a Conservative MP for Essex North, was a descendant of a family renowned for its eccentricity and parsimony. His ancestor Sir Hervey Elwes (c. 1683-1763), after retiring as Member for Sudbury in 1722, had spent the rest of his life zealously accumulating vast wealth by depriving himself of any comforts, residing at Stoke College, Suffolk, ‘where the wind entered at every broken casement, and the rain descended through the roof’.
He would sit in wet clothes sooner than have a fire to dry them; he would eat his provisions in the last stage of putrefaction soon than have a fresh joint from the butcher’s; and he wore a wig for above a fortnight, which I saw him pick up out of a rut in a lane where we were riding.
Topham, Life of the late John Elwes, 29.
It has been suggested that John Elwes was later an inspiration for Charles Dickens’s Scrooge.
In April 1835 Elwes accepted a requisition from local electors to stand as a Conservative for a vacancy at Essex North, created by the elevation of the sitting Member, the banker Alexander Baring, to the Lords. He received the unanimous backing of the North Essex Loyal and Conservative Association.
one of the good old John Bull school – plain speaking and sincere, and he possesses that sterling good sense which is of far more value in a legislator than the meretricious captivations of splendid eloquence.
Ibid.
In his address, he characterised himself as an unwavering friend to the agricultural interest and an unflinching defender of the established church, ready to combat ‘that restless spirit of Popish agitation’.
Unsurprisingly, Elwes is not known to have spoken in debate and he does not appear to have sat on any select committees. He was a steady attender, however, and loyally followed Peel into the division lobby on the major commercial and ecclesiastical issues of the day. Reflecting his attachment to the rural interest, he voted for Chandos’s motion for an address on agricultural relief, 25 May 1835, and against Clay’s motion on the corn laws, 16 Mar. 1837, and the bonded corn bill, 28 June 1837.
With parliamentary life reportedly not to his liking, Elwes retired at the 1837 dissolution.
Elwes died at his Suffolk seat at Stoke College in August 1849.
