Immensely wealthy, but considered by the courtesan Harriette Wilson to be ‘mean and vilely shabby’, Dick, throughout a lengthy parliamentary career, was known more for his lavish political dinners in Mayfair than his activities inside the Commons, where he was a silent Member who rarely troubled the division lobbies.
Dick’s entrance into politics at the age of only twenty-three was made possible by his family’s wealth and personal connections. He was the eldest son of Samuel Dick, a successful East India proprietor and manager of the Bank of Ireland. After a legal education in England and Ireland, he was returned in 1800 for Dunleer in the Irish parliament as a nominee of his kinsman John Foster, an arch anti-Unionist. Unsurprisingly, he opposed the Act of Union. After succeeding his father in 1802, he purchased a seat at Westminster, sitting for West Looe, Cornwall, and later represented Cashel, before resigning on a point of honour in 1809. In 1826 he sought to revive his political career by putting himself up for Maldon as a friend of Liverpool’s ministry, but despite spending heavily throughout an infamous fifteen-day poll, he was defeated. He subsequently came in for Orford as a nominee of the 3rd marquess of Hertford, before finally capturing a seat at Maldon in 1830.
Standing again for Maldon at the 1832 general election, Dick presented himself as an unwavering champion of agricultural protection and advocated a ‘speedy’ abolition of slavery. He also insisted that he was ‘friendly’ to reform, though he chastised Grey’s ministry for going ‘too far’ on the issue. He was comfortably returned in second place.
Dick attended the Commons more frequently in the second post-Reform Parliament, but he remained silent in debate and does not appear to have sat on any select committees. His main contribution to political life in the capital was his role as a socialite, hosting numerous dinners at Curzon Street for a small inner circle of Conservative MPs, who were generally united by an ardent Protestantism and close ties to the agricultural community.
Dick’s votes in the division lobbies reflected his initial loyalty to the Conservative party under Peel’s leadership. He was in the ministerial minority on the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, and the address, 26 Feb. 1835, but sided with the agricultural interest by backing Chandos’s motion for a repeal of the malt tax, 10 Mar. 1835. He was against Irish church reform, 2 Apr. 1835, and following the fall of Peel’s short-lived ministry, he consistently opposed Melbourne’s administration on Irish matters. At the 1837 general election he attacked the Whig ministry as ‘intolerable’, and highlighted his vote against the freeman clause of the municipal reform bill, 23 June 1835, and his support for John Walter’s defeated motion for an enquiry into the operation of the poor law with regard to outdoor relief, 1 Aug. 1836, as evidence of his staunch opposition to what he felt were the more unpalatable measures introduced by the government.
By the time of the 1841 general election, Dick was president of the Maldon True Blue Club, and had emerged as one of Essex’s leading voices against corn law repeal, the issue which dominated that year’s contest.
After voting for the Conservative ministry’s ecclesiastical courts bill, 28 Apr. 1843, Dick, who was once described by Disraeli as a ‘hot’ Protestant, also became an opponent of Peel on religious questions.
At the 1847 general election Dick was praised by his local party for being an enemy of ‘popery, Puseyism and priestcraft’. His role in successfully promoting a bill to authorise the Eastern Counties Railway’s purchase of the Maldon, Witham and Braintree Railway was also widely celebrated.
I am poor old Quintin Dick,
Bereft of home and riches,
I have pawned my hat and coat,
And sold my shirt and breeches.
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Dick did not have to wait long, however, for a return to the Commons. In March 1848 his deep commitment to the protectionist cause (and his even deeper pockets) earned him the Conservative nomination to contest a vacancy at Aylesbury, a large agricultural borough whose farmers had vociferously opposed corn law repeal. His unwavering opposition to ‘the modern theories of free trade’ played well and he was comfortably returned with a majority of 269 votes.
With his health declining, Dick retired from his Aylesbury seat at the 1852 dissolution, only to then seek election at Maldon, much to the surprise of the leaders of the Essex borough’s Conservative party, who had already selected two candidates for the forthcoming contest and claimed that Dick was yet to pay his share of debts incurred at the last general election.
Dick died at his Mayfair residence in March 1858, having been seriously ill for some time.
