A major local landowner, Bethell rarely spoke in debate during his decade representing Yorkshire’s East Riding, but provides a good example of a diligent county member who was useful in the committee-rooms and in promoting local bills. A steady Conservative, he remained active as chairman of the East Riding quarter sessions after retiring from the Commons in 1841, being remembered for his ‘acute legal knowledge, business-like habits, and courteous demeanour’ in this role.
Originally from Herefordshire,
The 1832 Reform Act conferred separate representation on the East Riding, and Bethell issued his election address that July, citing his long residence and his ‘connection with the Agricultural interests of the country’, whose welfare was inseparable from ‘the general prosperity of all classes’. He rebutted reports that he had changed his views on the corn laws and come out in favour of free trade.
Bethell, who later claimed that he ‘had ever been found at his post’, proved a diligent attender in his first Parliament.
Bethell regularly presented constituency petitions and was active in introducing local bills,
According to a local supporter, Bethell ‘spoke firmly’ at the hustings when seeking re-election in 1835.
Bethell loyally supported Peel’s short-lived ministry in the division lobbies, voting with him on the speakership, 19 Feb., the address, 26 Feb., the malt tax., 10 Mar., and the Irish church, 2 Apr. 1835. Thereafter he consistently opposed Whig ministers on the Irish church and Irish municipal reform, and at a local Conservative dinner in September 1836, he praised the efforts of the House of Lords ‘to protect every institution, both in church and state’.
Having happily been returned unopposed alongside his Whig colleague and neighbour Thompson on two occasions,
Bethell is not known to have spoken in debate in his final Parliament, but was an attentive member of the select committee on the rating of small tenements.
At the 1841 election Bethell retired, concerned that at his age he risked becoming ‘unequal’ to the ‘faithful and assiduous discharge’ of his parliamentary duties.
Bethell continued as chairman of the East Riding quarter sessions until 1850, displaying ‘an impartiality of feeling, a soundness of judgment, a patient care in the mastery of all details, an anxiety to administer complete justice’.
‘Beloved and honoured by all’,
