‘God knows they had too many of them in the House of Commons’, Whitbread declared of parliamentary orators in 1835.
On his father’s death in 1815 Whitbread had succeeded to the family estates, centred on Southill Park, seven miles from Bedford, which extended to over 15,000 acres with more than 500 tenants. Whitbread also had a stake, worth £50,000, in the family brewing business.
Whitbread voted with the Whig ministers in 1831-2, believing that the opposition to parliamentary reform was ‘nonsensical’.
Whitbread is not known to have served on any select committees and was often absent from the Commons: in fifteen divisions between February and July 1833 he voted in five, and in ten divisions between February and May 1834 he voted in three. Like Lord John Russell, whom he knew well, Whitbread regarded himself as being on the reforming wing of the Whig party. His commitment to reform, however, did not extend to Joseph Hume’s motions for reducing military sinecures and pensions and the abolition of flogging in the army or to shorter parliaments, all of which he voted against.
Seeking re-election in 1835, Whitbread advocated retrenchment and modest reforms in church and state, ‘true Whig reformers … (being) true conservatives’.
By the time of his death Whitbread’s undistinguished parliamentary career was almost forgotten. Yet he was remembered as a man of ‘indomitable perseverance … (and) enterprising disposition … he had not only the ability but also the will to do good’.
The interests of agriculture were always important to Whitbread. In securing parliamentary support for the new railway, he had argued that it would be an efficient means of transporting cattle as well enabling potatoes and other vegetables to be delivered more speedily to Birmingham. Whitbread strongly supported the Bedfordshire Agricultural Society, providing prizes at its annual shows for the best livestock and the best demonstrations of such rural skills as stacking and thatching, and the Bedfordshire Agricultural Benevolent Society. He permitted the grounds of Southill Park to be used for archery contests, croquet matches, fetes held by the Bedford Working Men’s Institute and for drilling by the Bedford volunteer rifles, providing the latter with a marquee ‘which contained an unlimited supply of beef and ham sandwiches, cheese and beer’.
When Whitbread died at Southill Park in June 1867, after seeking to restore his health in Torquay, the house and estate passed to his brother Samuel Charles (1796-1879) and his stake of £50,000 in the family brewing business passed to his nephew Samuel, who sat as Liberal MP for Bedford, 1852-95. His second wife received £2,000 and an annuity of £4,000, together with a furnished house in Purfleet, Essex. There were also legacies to his stepdaughter, his stepson, his first wife’s niece, his steward, the daughter of his gamekeeper, whose husband had been murdered many years before (£60), and the nurse (£52) who had cared for him when he was ill in 1861.
