A junior member of the family that had once dominated the politics of County Antrim, Chichester’s foray into parliamentary politics proved short-lived. He was inclined to rest his pretensions ‘more on the claims of his family than on his individual merits’, and his drift away from the Whig-reformers towards the Conservatives became unpopular with the electors of Belfast, where his profligate father’s political influence had begun to decline. In spite of his family’s ‘peculiarly weighty claims’ on the constituency, he was defeated in 1835 and did not seek another seat before his untimely death whilst on military service in 1840.
Chichester was born at Ormeau House, a younger son of the 2nd marquess of Donegall, a notorious rake who, as the earl of Belfast, had represented Carrickfergus in the Irish Parliament, 1798-9.
Like five of his seven brothers Chichester entered military service. At the age of 16 he assumed the commission of his recently deceased brother, Lord Spencer Chichester (1805-25), in the Royal Fusilier Regiment, and purchased the rank of captain in December 1827.
Although Donegall had been an opponent of Catholic emancipation, he supported the Whig-Liberal party during the reform period.
Having eschewed another contest at Donegal, and despite lacking political experience, in August 1832 Chichester announced that he would stand for Belfast at the general election.
Chichester’s attendance at Westminster was punctuated by illnesses, and he contributed little to the business of the House other than his occasional presence in the division lobby. However, he attended the reformed Parliament at the earliest opportunity, leaving Ormeau for London in late January 1833.
Chichester’s principal appeal to the electors on his return in 1832 had been his ‘special and zealous devotedness to the local interests’ of Belfast.
By now regarded as ‘a doubtful Reformer’, Chichester came forward again for Belfast at the 1835 general election.
Chichester’s defeat marked the decline of the Donegall interest in Belfast, and although his brother Lord John Ludford Chichester sat for the borough from 1845-52, the enforced sale of the family’s Belfast property in 1850 saw its influence come to an end.
