align="left">Davies was from an ancient Shropshire family, his ancestors having taken up residence in Herefordshire in the late seventeenth century.
Davies was an very active member who considered himself ‘a Whig, and perhaps something more than a Whig’, arguing in 1834 that it ‘was not possible for any small clique now to rule the country … For an Administration to be powerful, it was now necessary to appeal to the people’.
A member of the established church, Davies resisted the separation of church and state, but favoured the removal of all disabilities from Dissenters, condemned ‘the system of non residences and pluralities’, and supported Althorp’s plan to replace church rates with a grant raised from a land tax, 21 Apr. 1834.
Having ‘uniformly supported every measure calculated to ameliorate the condition’ of West Indian slaves, Davies considered himself ‘as decided an enemy’ of the institution as any member of the House. In December 1832 he had advocated slavery’s ‘earliest abolition … consistent with common sense’, addressing constituents on the subject the following year.
Davies believed the corn laws required ‘an entire revision’, having been ‘framed on the worst principle’, but argued that ‘cheap bread’ also required ‘an immense reduction of taxation’. He therefore supported Hume’s motion for reducing the protective duty, 7 Mar. 1834, but did not favour its entire abolition.
A critic of ‘the bad construction and want of proper accommodation of the House’, Davies lamented that its appearance ‘was frequently rather that of a debating-club or a bear-garden, than of a deliberative assembly’. The noise, he complained, ‘was excessive, and Members, instead of attending to the proceedings, amused themselves with talking, or laying stretched at full length asleep upon the benches’.
A critic of the Russian and Turkish Treaties over the Dardanelles, Davies was part of the growing Russophobic element within the Commons, and contended that it was ‘the duty of every prudent Ministry to watch the rapid growth which had for years been increasing, of the colossal power of Russia’.
Although he did not introduce any bills, Davies was an active committee man, particularly in regard to parliamentary affairs, public order, and military matters, sitting on select committees on public documents, the House of Commons buildings, civil list charges, the establishment of the House, army and navy appointments, parochial registration, the metropolitan police, the Cold Bath Fields meeting, and militia estimates.
Davies welcomed the appointment of the Melbourne’s ministry in 1834 which, having been ‘weeded of those half and half Reformers who were rather likely to impede the march of Reform’, held ‘principles he entertained as his own’.
Davies was returned unopposed for Worcester in 1837, as a supporter of the abolition of church rates and amendment of the poor law.
Davies did, however, continue to register his opinion, supporting Villiers’s motion complaining of the corn laws, 19 Feb. 1839, opposing the abolition of capital punishment, 5 Mar. 1840, and voting for the third reading of the Irish municipal corporations bill, 9 Mar. 1840. That month he also waited upon Lord Palmerston as a member of a deputation from the committee of the South American bondholders, but poor health prevented a regular attendance. By July 1840 he was not expected to offer again. Increasingly incapacitated, he paired at times with John Davenport and John Wilson Patten, opposing Sir Robert Peel’s confidence motion, 4 June 1841.
Having participated in only 13 of the 119 divisions in the previous session, Davies retired at the 1841 general election. He had always considered himself ‘a rude and blunt soldier, who said the things which came uppermost’.
