Maunsell was a protectionist who represented Northamptonshire North between 1835 and 1857. Although he sustained a lifetime of legal and military service in his locality, his activity at Westminster left a lot to be desired. One contemporary analysis of his political career raised doubts as to whether his voice had been ‘heard twice in the House of Commons, or his vote recorded half a dozen times in any session’.
Details of Maunsell’s early life remain unclear. By the time he inherited Thorpe Malsor Hall from his father in 1818 (which had been in the family since 1620), he was an established member of the Northamptonshire gentry, an active committing magistrate, member of the militia and a frequent feature of the social scene, particularly around Kettering.
Maunsell’s first recorded political activity in the county came in March 1830, when he helped to organise a petition from Northamptonshire’s freeholders regarding national distress.
Shortly after, Maunsell came forward as a candidate for a by-election in the division, running a well-organised campaign. He promised to defend the constitution, the established Church and to promote any measure that provided ‘permanent and substantial relief’ to occupiers of land. With the county’s Whigs and Liberals bullish over their prospects, Maunsell confidently informed electors that his canvass had afforded ‘a sure presage of final triumph’.
Maunsell was silent throughout his first parliament, but maintained a slightly above average attendance in the division lobbies, where he sided with the Ultra Tories. Of note, he voted in opposition to the third reading of the Irish municipal corporations bill, 28 Mar., Harvey’s motion for a select committee to scrutinise pensions, 19 Apr., the government’s Irish church bill, 3 June, and against Peel in favour of Chandos’ motion on agricultural distress, 27 Apr. 1836. In the following year he opposed Grote’s ballot motion, 7 Mar. 1837, and Clay’s motion on the corn laws, 16 Mar. 1837. He acted as a teller in a division on the first clause of the established church bill, 14 July 1836 and presented a petition in opposition to the alteration in the poor law bill, 1 Aug. 1836, and the abolition of church rates, 26 May 1837. He does not appear to have sat on any committees during his 22 year parliamentary career.
Maunsell had maintained a strong presence in the county as a magistrate (and would continue to do so until his retirement as an MP) ahead of the 1837 election, and attended Conservative dinners in Northampton in October 1836 and February 1837, when the £50 tenants of Thrapston presented him with a candelabrum.
Maunsell’s attendance in the division lobbies during the subsequent parliament remained slightly above average, and he maintained his Ultra Tory stance. In doing so he voted against Peel and in the minority in favour of the factory bill defining adults as being aged eighteen, rather than twenty-one, 1 July 1839, in the small minority that opposed the third reading of the Irish municipal corporations bill, 9 Mar. 1840, in the minority that favoured Plumptre’s motion to end the Maynooth grant, 23 June 1840, and in the failed opposition to extended tenures for the poor law commissioners, 22 Mar. 1841. He broke his parliamentary silence in 1838 to second the motion of his fellow North Northamptonshire MP, Viscount Maidstone, that O’Connell be reprimanded for a breach of privileges, 26 Feb. 1838, and made his second and last recorded parliamentary speech to praise the admiralty for providing speedy reinforcements in the Syrian war, 1 Mar. 1841. He presented a number of petitions throughout the parliament including several that opposed any alteration of the corn laws, as well as the government’s plan of national education.
Maunsell expressed continued support for protection at pro-corn law meetings at Market Harborough and Northampton in February 1839, and the Northamptonshire North Conservative dinner and North Northamptonshire Agricultural Association in September that year.
Maunsell apologised to Sir Robert Peel for his poor attendance of division lobbies during the first session of the subsequent parliament, citing ‘violent rheumatic pains in the head’, but assured him that the chief whip, Thomas Fremantle, had identified a pair to negate his absence.
Poor health had prevented Maunsell from attending North Northamptonshire’s Agricultural Association meetings in 1842 and 1843, but he was well enough to attend the inaugural meeting of the Northamptonshire Agricultural Protection Society in January 1844, when he accused the Anti-Corn Law League of endeavouring to ‘reduce the poor man to the condition of serfs on the Continent’.
His attendance in the division lobbies continued to be well below average, until the last year of the subsequent parliament, when he attended more often. He remained in the protectionist wing of the party, voting in the minorities that opposed the removal of Jewish disabilities, 17 Dec. 1847, 4 May 1848, as well as the repeal of the navigation laws, 12 Mar. 1849, 23 Apr. 1849. He was also in the minorities that favoured Berkeley’s motion to reconsider the corn laws, 14 May 1850, and the relief of the distress of owners of land, 13 Feb. 1851, as well as in the majorities that defeated all three of Milner Gibson’s motions to abolish the taxes on knowledge, 12 May 1852. He is recorded as presenting a solitary petition during this parliament, in favour of a reduction in naval and military expenditure, 16 Feb. 1848.
Although unable to attend the 1849 annual meeting of the Northamptonshire Protection Society, he promised to give ‘his best exertions … in favour of agriculture’.
Maunsell attended only 5% (45) of the 900 recorded divisions during his final parliament, but his relatively high attendance of major divisions revealed his continued support for the fledgling protectionist wing of the party. He voted in the minority to oppose Villiers’ motion praising free trade, 26 Nov. 1852, in the minorities in favour of Disraeli’s 1852 budget, 16 Dec. 1852, and Spooner’s anti-Maynooth motion, 23 Feb. 1853, and opposed the Jewish disabilities bill at every reading in 1853. He also voted in the minority that opposed Gladstone’s budget resolutions, 2 May 1853, the majority against the abolition of church rates, 21 June 1854, and the minority in favour of Disraeli’s motion criticising the prosecution of the Crimean war, 25 May 1855. His final recorded activity was a vote in the majority for Cobden’s censure motion over the Chinese war, 3 Mar. 1857.
Reports ahead of the 1857 election that a number of the division’s electors ‘had expressed themselves very strongly about Mr Maunsell’s inattention to his duties as a member of parliament’ were followed by the announcement of his retirement, aged 75.
