Abdy, the son of a navy captain and an admiral’s daughter, was a leading figure in the local Liberal associations of Essex, where he had inherited extensive family estates. After a costly and humiliating defeat at Maldon in 1841 he was returned for the venal Dorset borough of Lyme Regis in 1847, with the backing of a former Liberal MP who had been unseated for electoral corruption. He narrowly escaped a similar fate, after bribing voters with offers of employment on the railway schemes in which he had an interest, and sat as a staunchly Protestant Liberal until his retirement in 1852.
Abdy’s ancestors included three lines of baronets, all of which became extinct. In 1775 the substantial Essex estate of Albyns had passed (without the title) from Sir Anthony Abdy 5th bt, MP for Knaresborough, 1763-75, to Abdy’s grandfather, the Rev. Thomas Abdy Rutherford (1775-98), who duly changed his surname to Abdy. Rutherford’s heir was John Rutherford Abdy Hatch Abdy, the elder brother of Abdy’s father, who pursued a distinguished naval career, commanding the brig sloop Dotterel against the French fleet in 1809.
At the following year’s general election Abdy came forward for Maldon as a ‘reformer of all abuses’ and ‘warm friend’ of the Liberal party. His support for a modification of the corn laws that stopped short of ‘entire repeal’ was eagerly seized upon by his Protectionist opponents, who accused him of making statements ‘suited to all parties’ in order to ’catch every fish that floats in the political ocean’, and of betraying the landed interest to which he belonged. He was also condemned for unnecessarily disturbing the peace of the borough and threatened with ‘a good thrashing’, as he wryly noted on the hustings.
Rumoured as a potential Liberal candidate for both the Essex divisions in 1847, Abdy surprised many by offering instead for Lyme Regis with the backing of its disgruntled former Liberal MP William Pinney, who had been unseated for electoral corruption in 1842.
Abdy was also alleged to have bribed voters with offers of employment on railway schemes and to have engaged in treating.
A frequent attender, who is not known to have spoken in debate, Abdy gave loyal support to the Liberal ministry on most major issues, backing Russell’s free trade policies and repeal of the navigation laws, although he sided with the ultra-Protestants against further Catholic claims, 8 Dec. 1847 and 19 July 1849. He gave regular support to Jewish emancipation but opposed most radical calls for further parliamentary reform and greater economies. Reporting his vote against Cobden’s proposals for military reductions, 26 Feb. 1849, the press grouped him among the ‘army and navy’ MPs, being the ‘son of a navy captain by the daughter of an admiral’.
In March 1849 Abdy was sued by his agent for unpaid election bills at Maldon, where he had been made to ‘stump down’ £2,000 in 1841.
At the 1852 general election Abdy retired from Lyme Regis, where Pinney had decided to reclaim the seat following Attwood’s fall from grace.
Abdy died twelve days after his wife at his residence in Grosvenor Place, London in July 1877.
