The only son of a Presbyterian merchant, Curry, a lawyer, was regarded as a man of ‘honour, and probity, and high principle’. His political life was characterised by ‘manly and straightforward conduct’, which underpinned his staunch support for the Whig government.
Curry was born in county Tyrone and in early life was also known by the name of Corry.
Of ‘liberal’ opinions, Curry appeared in March 1837 on the platform at a large public meeting at Coburg Gardens, Dublin, which expressed confidence in the Irish administration of Lord Mulgrave.
Considered a valuable accession ‘to the ranks of Irish Reform’, Curry was a regular presence in the division lobbies, where he gave steady support to the Melbourne ministry on most issues.
In February 1838 he joined the Bristol election committee and was also appointed chairman of the inquiry into the City of London election, appearing at the bar of the House to report on its deliberations.
Although a reformer, Curry was not an advocate of retrenchment, and had voted against Hume’s proposal to reduce the size of the country’s land forces, 12 Mar. 1838. He wished to see ‘efficiency first and economy after’, and in March 1839 spoke in favour of greater naval expenditure, viewing the navy’s current condition as ‘very inefficient’.
In February 1840 Curry spoke against the Conservatives’ attempt to raise the qualification of Irish municipal electors from £8 to £10. In a major speech against the second reading of Lord Stanley’s Irish registration bill, 26 Mar. 1840, he drew upon his attendance at several registries and elections held under the provisions of the Irish Reform Act, and not only condemned the system under which Irish voters were registered, but also criticised what he regarded as the inherent political bias of Stanley’s bill.
Despite being passed over for the Irish solicitor-generalship in favour of a Catholic candidate in February 1839, Curry was nevertheless regarded as ‘the pet serjeant of the Whigs’, and he was nominated for a vacant mastership in chancery in March 1840.
In the performance of his legal duties Curry was said to have given ‘the most perfect satisfaction’ to the body of Irish solicitors, and was ‘much esteemed by the bar’. He was widely regarded as ‘attentive, zealous, and impartial’, and ‘universally respected for his integrity’ in public and professional life. He died at the residence of his nephew, Brady Maziere, at Prospect House, Delgany, co. Wicklow, after a few days’ illness in September 1842.
