Doveton, whose ancestors had settled in St. Helena in the seventeenth century, had made his fortune in the military service of the East India Company. He purchased a town house in Henrietta Street in 1808 and the Northamptonshire manor house of Everdon, which he vastly improved, the following year, and like his brothers Richard (1754-1823) and John (1768-1847), he remained an influential figure in East India Company circles. In 1812, at his second attempt, he had come in for the venal freeman borough of Lancaster, and he retained his seat in 1820, despite curtailing his personal canvass to cut costs. He is not known to have spoken in debate and made no mark in the House, where he gave measured support to Lord Liverpool’s administration.
biography text
Volume
Parlimentarian
Parliamentarian
529
