Best known for his role in the cross-party alliance that helped to defeat the 1866 Liberal reform bill, Knightley clocked up forty years on the Tory backbenches as an independent country gentleman. Part of the aristocratic faction of ‘Old Believers’ who maintained a deep distrust of Disraelian Conservatism prior to 1868, he was also a noted whist player, who codified the laws of the game with fellow Old Believer and founding member of the Turf Club, ‘Big Ben’ Bentinck.
Knightley’s ancestors had represented Northamptonshire intermittently since 1420. His father, Charles, sat for the southern division of the county between 1835 and 1852.
Following his father’s decision to retire from Northamptonshire South in 1852, Knightley announced his intention to stand as his replacement, initiating a career-long rift with the local Conservative association, who he had not consulted. Their nominee, William Cartwright, was eventually persuaded to stand down, following a public apology from both Knightley and his father, and Knightley’s own offer to give way.
Despite Knightley’s professions of liberality on the hustings, his first act of note at Westminster was to side with a small minority of hard-line Protectionists against an amended version of Villiers’ motion praising free trade, 27 Nov. 1852. For a brief period he sided with the Conservative whip on major issues (his attendance of the division lobbies was slightly below average for the parliament), and in January 1855 he acted as one of Disraeli’s ‘small deers’, who prolonged debate over Roebuck’s motion for a select committee on the condition of the army in the Crimean War in order that Conservative members could get to London to support it, 26 and 29 Jan. 1855.
Following this, Knightley was in the majority against Disraeli’s motion to rearrange finances to allow income tax to be abolished, 23 Feb. 1857, abstained from voting with Disraeli in support of Cobden’s censure motion on Canton, 3 Mar 1857, and at the subsequent election expressed his public support for Palmerston’s ‘prosecution of the [Chinese] war’.
At the 1857 election Knightley declined to issue a joint election address with Vyse, and distanced himself from him on the hustings, where he reminded electors of his refusal to follow Disraeli over the Chinese war. Accordingly, he labelled himself a ‘thoroughly independent’ but ‘consistent Conservative’ and spoke in favour of the established Church, expressed a willingness to widen the franchise in the counties and opposed the ballot and triennial parliaments.
Knightley’s presence at Westminster increased thereafter, and whilst he voted with the minority Derby administration on most issues, he took an independent line in support of the established Church and was one of the hard-line opponents of the church rates abolition bill, 21 Apr. 1858. He supported Spooner’s anti-Maynooth motion, 29 Apr. 1858, and stated that he was ‘opposed to all measures for admitting Jews to Parliament’, prior to terming Derby’s Jewish Disabilities Removal Act ‘the very worst [bill] that was every submitted to the House’, 19 July 1858. Knightley also found his parliamentary voice during 1858 over the question of parliamentary reform – he supported the maintenance of the property qualification for MPs, 13 May, 2 June 1858; expressed his willingness to support the expansion of county franchise to £10 householders so long as borough freeholders were removed from the counties (and preferably if 130 borough seats were redistributed to the counties), 27 Apr. 1858, 22 Mar. 1859; supported the reimbursement of registration officers, 26 July 1858; and opposed restrictions on the conveyance of county voters unless some alternative mechanism was identified to prevent the effective disfranchisement of poor voters who could not afford to attend the poll without reimbursement, 2 Mar. 1859. Knightley later settled on voting papers as a solution to this issue.
Knightley divided in the minority in favour of the second reading of the Derby government’s reform bill, 31 Mar. 1859 and was re-elected unopposed at the subsequent election where he stood as a ‘moderate and liberal, but consistent, Conservative’.
Knightley was returned top of the poll in 1865 ahead of Cartwright and their liberal opponent Lord Fitzroy, who Knightley condemned for his unwillingness to denounce the ‘democratic doctrines’ of John Bright.
After the fall of Russell’s government, Knightley’s continued unwillingness to toe the Conservative line was confirmed, when in July 1866, following another attempt by Derby at coalition building within the party, he refused the posts of under-secretary for foreign affairs and secretary of the admiralty on the basis that he could not work under Disraeli.
Knightley initially resigned at the subsequent election, after charging the local Conservative association with expecting him to shoulder the election costs of his fellow sitting MP, Henry Cartwright. His move prompted a grovelling apology from the Conservative association, who realised that without Knightley they were unlikely to retain their control of the county’s two seats, and led to the resignation of Cartwright.
Knightley retired in 1892 and was subsequently given a peerage, being created Baron Knightley of Fawsley on 23 Aug. 1892. He suffered the first of several strokes in November 1894, and died just over a year later on 19 Dec. 1895, following which his titles became extinct. He was buried at his Fawsley estate and his will was proved under £23,023.
