Admiral Harvey, a hero of Trafalgar, whose volcanic temper had landed him in serious trouble and ended his active naval career in 1809, at the age of 50, was a reformed gambler turned skinflint. A veteran Pittite, who found routine parliamentary business boring and the expenses and obligations of a county Member burdensome, he had given up his Essex seat on financial grounds in 1812.
the times were so alarming, that ... nothing but a signal defeat should drive him back ... He was ... not alarmed with fear and trepidation, but ... [had] a manly and decided determination to meet the radicals and their crew when called upon ... They found themselves opposed neither to friend nor enemy; their hand grenades, daggers, or the midnight murders of innocent men going to their dinners; there were none of these things on board ships; they fought like men, not like assassins ... He was church and king to the backbone, and a king’s man he would be for ever.
Essex RO, Gunnis mss D/DGu C1/2/3, Harvey to da. Louisa Lloyd, 10 Mar.; Suff. Chron. 11, 18 Mar. 1820; Procs. at Colchester and Essex Elections (1820), 45-46.
Harvey presented petitions against, 11 May, and for, 16 June 1820, the bill to divide the Essex sessions between Colchester and Chelmsford. He spoke against it and was a teller with Western for the hostile majority, 20 June.
mistaken my party principles, for a most decided party man I am, and notwithstanding I claim to be as independent as any Member in the House of Commons ... I am church and king, and moreover I belong to several Pitt Clubs ... The expenses of being chosen and attending Parliament even without an opposition are by no means trifling, including the attendance at county meetings, subscriptions to public charities and other institutions ... and the times by no means favourable to country gentlemen collecting such monies as may reduce them ... It is right to bring these things under your consideration for there is no passport to happiness in this life beyond our own fireside.
NLW, Aston Hall mss 460, 461.
Harvey voted against more extensive tax reductions to relieve distress, 11, 21 Feb., but divided against government for admiralty economies, 1 Mar., and abolition of one of the joint-postmasterships, 13 Mar., 2 May 1822. He presented and endorsed a petition from Essex grand jury for more frequent gaol deliveries, 27 Mar. On 1 Apr. he confirmed Western’s statement of the ‘great extent’ of agricultural distress in the county, and he presented parish petitions calling for relief, 22 Apr., when he dissociated himself from Western’s currency fixation, and 3 May.
He presented several Essex petitions for repeal of the coastwise coal duties in February 1824.
Early in 1826 his wife complained that Harvey was ‘in one of his dreadful talking humours’, having ‘been ill’, and was `cross and ... stingy’.
In mid-November 1826 a furious Harvey joined his wife at Brighton, where he reprimanded her for leaving Chigwell on ‘a whim’ and putting him to expense. Two months later she reported that ‘at present his occupations are quarrelling with his servants ... and swearing dreadfully ... and saving money’.
The admiral is sadly out of sorts. His temper is so irritable that he has given warning to five servants ... [He] has actually scraped up all his money to lend out at interest, depending on some interests of former sums he has lent, which are due to him now and which he has not received, which adds to his horrid temper ... He has not one guinea in his banker’s hands ... He has scraped up ... £35,000 ... and he is so proud of it, he is always boasting to me of the large sum he has put out.
Gunnis mss Z4, Lady Harvey to Louisa Lloyd [Nov.], 25 Dec. 1828.
As expected, he opposed Catholic emancipation when the Wellington ministry conceded it in 1829. Presenting and endorsing a hostile petition from Saffron Walden, 17 Feb., he declared that ‘my opinion is strengthened, not relaxed, as to the propriety of maintaining the constitution as it now stands’. He presented many hostile Essex petitions in the following six weeks, said that the ‘most dangerous’ measure was ‘very much worse than I could possibly have imagined it would be’, 6 Mar., and accused Peel of betraying his followers, 12 Mar. He voted against emancipation, 6, 18 Mar., and paired against it, 23, 30 Mar. He brought up petitions against the East London waterworks bill, 25 Mar., 13 Apr., and 1 May, the Thames Watermen Act, 4 May, and the metropolitan roads bill, 11 May. In his last known speech in the Commons, 13 May 1829, he urged Western to withdraw his motion for repeal of the tax on husbandry horses because ministers had promised to review the assessed taxes.
Reports of Harvey’s death in early November 1829 were only slightly premature, for he died ‘suddenly’ at Rolls in February 1830, four days after the marriage of his daughter Emma to Colonel William Eustace, ‘so that the bridal apparel had not lost its freshness when it was exchanged for sable mourning’.
