‘One of the finest horseman that ever got into a saddle’, Knightley represented Northamptonshire South between 1835 and 1852.
Knightley’s ancestors had represented Northamptonshire from their Fawsley seat near Daventry since 1420.
Viscount Althorp’s succession to the peerage in November 1834 opened a vacancy in the reformed southern division of the county, and Knightley, who had remained politically active since 1832 – most notably becoming a founding vice-president of the Banbury Agricultural Association in October 1834 – commenced an immediate canvass.
Knightley broke his leg falling from his horse shortly after his election and missed every major division of Peel’s brief administration.
Knightley was returned unopposed with Cartwright at that year’s election, when he employed strong anti-Catholic rhetoric on the hustings in protest at the recent support provided by Irish MPs to the Whig government. ‘The question’, he informed electors, was whether ‘the future be cheered by the light of Protestantism, or be surrounded by the dark shadow of Popery’.
Knightley and Cartwright successfully contested their seats in 1841, beating a last minute Liberal candidate by over 1,000 votes. Ironically, given subsequent events, Knightley dismissed a recent report that Peel would support an alteration to the corn laws as ‘malignant’ and assured electors that a Conservative government ‘would not give way to popular clamour’ for repeal.
A by-election in Northamptonshire South in February 1846, which returned the Protectionist Richard Vyse, allowed Knightley to air his frustration with Peel’s administration. Speaking in favour of Vyse on the hustings and signalling his deference for the views of ‘Mr D’Israeli’, he labelled Peel’s ‘tergiversation’ over the corn laws a ‘moral disgrace’ and ‘declared to God that … he would rather be carried to his grave to-morrow than vote with Sir Robert’.
Ahead of the 1847 election, Knightley was mocked by the editor of The Times as ‘a well dried specimen of the old English squire’ who should be ‘ticketed and put in a museum’
Knightley’s parliamentary activity dwindled in 1852, and ahead of the election that year he announced his retirement at the age of 71. In resignation he expressed his support for Lord Derby’s government, but confessed to his constituents that he felt out of step with the times, admitting ‘my notions on passing events are, I am aware, obsolete’.
