A Whig barrister who briefly represented Knaresborough, Rotch was described by one contemporary as ‘a man, who... would resort to any wily expedient to attain his own ends’. His career ‘was strangely chequered by the multiplicity of his projects’ and ‘his public life was marked by an unusual amount of contention’.
Rotch’s family came from Massachusetts, where they had risen from humble beginnings to become ‘the most influential family in colonial whaling’ by 1750.
This failure led Rotch’s father to abandon his ‘Quaker prejudices’ and allow his son to become a lawyer, being called to the bar in 1821.
Rotch’s name was linked to several constituencies before 1832. In contrast with his later views, he initially leaned towards the Tories. In 1826 he canvassed Sudbury as a ‘true blue’, but withdrew amidst allegations that another candidate had bought him off.
After some initial uncertainty as to whether he was canvassing on his own behalf or testing the ground for another candidate, Rotch offered for Knaresborough at the 1832 general election.
Rotch’s involvement in the 1830 Evesham contest was again scrutinised in March 1833 when he was nominated as chairman of the Middlesex quarter sessions, a role he had undertaken pro tem since February.
Rotch was nonetheless an active parliamentarian. His mother wrote in March 1834 that ‘Ben is a Reformer, not a Radical; he is truly independent and will not truckle to the Ministers’.
‘Gifted with rare natural eloquence’, Rotch lost little time in making his maiden speech, in the debate on the address, bemoaning the focus on Irish questions and advocating ‘careful and anxious’ reform of the Church of England, 8 Feb. 1833.
Drawing on experience on the bench, Rotch took a sustained interest in crime and punishment. He complained of the poor state of prisons, particularly Newgate, 26 Feb. 1833, and argued that solitary confinement was more effective than flogging, 2 Apr. 1833. He endorsed enabling magistrates to prosecute those involved with bear-baiting, dog-fighting and similar sports, 8 May, and backed the dwelling-house robbery bill, 12 June 1833. In July 1833 Rotch’s conduct as chairman of the Middlesex quarter sessions came under scrutiny in the House. Doubts about whether some witnesses had been sworn in properly before magistrates at Clerkenwell had provoked a protracted dispute between the magistrates, led by Rotch, who insisted that their procedures were correct, and the judges, who decided that any convictions arising from trials at the Old Bailey involving these witnesses were null and void.
Rotch was ‘called to account’ by his constituents for his absence from Harvey’s motion for a scrutiny of the pension list, 18 Feb. 1834, but made amends by attacking this ‘odious burthen’ and voting with Harvey, 5 May 1834.
Thereafter Rotch continued his legal practice, with patent cases his specialty.
He nonetheless remained active as a magistrate and maintained his interest in prison reform. His ‘persevering exertions’ prompted magistrates to investigate ‘the extremely disgraceful state of the New Prison’ at Clerkenwell in 1836, following which they decided to replace it in 1844.
In 1843 a visiting relative reported that Rotch had ‘changed a good deal, is monstrously fat, and entirely bald’. He suffered badly from arthritis, and was a keen proponent of hydropathy, extolling its benefits in the Lancet.
