Reynolds Moreton, whose family had been established in Gloucestershire since the seventeenth century, was renowned as a ‘follower of the hounds’ and frequenter of ‘fashionable circles’.
He confirmed Guise’s opinion that it was desirable to re-establish local courts in the Forest of Dean, 27 June 1831. He divided for the second reading of the reintroduced reform bill, 6 July, and generally supported its details, though he voted against giving borough freeholders the right to vote in counties, 17 Aug., and for Lord Chandos’s clause to enfranchise £50 tenants-at-will, 18 Aug., and the transfer of Aldborough from schedule B to A, 14 Sept. He divided for the bill’s passage, 21 Sept., the second reading of the Scottish bill, 23 Sept., and Lord Ebrington’s confidence motion, 10 Oct. He attended the county meeting to petition the Lords for reform, 28 Sept., when he advised against ‘any act of disaffection’ and promised that ‘if this bill should not pass he would come down again immediately to ask his constituents to petition the throne for a creation of new peers’.
At the general election later that year Reynolds Moreton was returned for East Gloucestershire in second place behind Guise, which he proclaimed a triumph for the ‘cause of freedom and independence’.
