Round, a barrister and committed evangelical, sat for a decade as Conservative Member for the northern division of his native Essex, but is probably best known for standing against William Gladstone at Oxford University in 1847. A member of one of Colchester’s leading families, he was a direct descendant of James Round (1680-1745), a successful bookseller who had purchased Birch Hall, near Epping, in 1724. Thereafter the family, mainly through favourable marriage alliances, inherited substantial property in the region.
At the 1837 general election Round was brought forward for Essex North by the local Conservative party. His address made clear his staunch support for the established church and agricultural protection.
A silent Member who is not known to have served on any select committees, Round made little impression in the Commons. In his first Parliament he followed Peel into the division lobby on most major issues, and supported his motion of no confidence in the Whig ministry, 4 June 1841. At the 1841 general election he put agricultural protection at the heart of his campaign, asserting that its withdrawal would bring ‘ruin and misery’ to British farmers. He was again re-elected unopposed.
Round’s votes in his second Parliament underlined his evangelical instincts. He opposed the Dissenters’ chapels bill, 6 June 1844, the permanent endowment of Maynooth college, 18 Apr. 1845, and the Roman Catholic relief bill, 6 May 1846. After initially supporting Peel’s commercial policy, voting for a sliding scale on corn duties, 9 Mar. 1842, and the sugar duties bill, 17 June 1844, he opposed the premier by voting against corn law repeal at the bill’s critical second and third readings, 27 Mar. 1846, 15 May 1846.
At the 1847 dissolution Round retired from his seat at Essex North in order to accept a requisition from members of Oxford University’s convocation to stand against Gladstone for the opening created by the retirement of Thomas Estcourt.
There is undoubtedly a strong feeling that an Oxford representative should be an eminent man, distinguished by honours at the University and success in the political world, ... but Round is without so much academic distinction. As to success in political life ... Round is – nobody.
Oxford and Cambridge Review (1847), 746-7.
The editor of the Morning Post concurred, writing that ‘Mr Gladstone may not be the man whom we would have selected for Oxford, but as, between him and Mr Round, we think there can be no comparison’.
Despite remaining a popular figure in Essex, Round showed little appetite to seek a return to Parliament, preferring instead to focus exclusively on county matters. In 1854 he was appointed chairman of Essex’s lunatic asylum and he continued in his role as recorder of Colchester until his retirement in 1863, whereupon the town council commissioned a full-length portrait of him for the assembly room.
Round died at Birch Hall in December 1867, leaving effects valued at under £120,000.
