Robarts was the eldest of the four sons of Abraham Robarts, who sat for Worcester, 1796-1816, and the longest lived of the three that entered Parliament. Like his father, a wealthy merchant, he was a partner in the London banking firm known by 1820 as Curtis, Robarts and Curtis of 15 Lombard Street, whose senior partner, Sir William Curtis, was Tory Member for London. In 1816 Robarts received a considerable inheritance from his father, which included East and West Indian interests. His fortune was supplemented by the bequests he received on the deaths of his brothers (for each of whom he acted as executor): William, Member for St. Albans, in 1820; James, an East India Company employee, in 1825; and George, who had formerly sat for Wallingford, in 1829.
Robarts voted against government on the civil list, 3, 5, 8 May, the appointment of an additional baron of exchequer in Scotland, 15 May, and for economies in revenue collection, 4 July 1820. He divided with opposition on the Queen Caroline affair, 22, 26 June, and presented a Maidstone address to her, 30 Oct.
He divided in favour of parliamentary reform, 20 Feb., 24 Apr., and alteration of the Scottish representative system, 2 June 1823. He voted for inquiries into the Irish church establishment, 4 Mar., and the legal proceedings against the Dublin Orange rioters, 22 Apr. He served his constituents by assisting in the passage of the bill to light Maidstone with gas, which he introduced, 13 Mar. 1823, when he presented a petition from the town’s merchants, bankers and manufacturers for repeal of the Insolvent Debtors Acts.
his views had been entirely changed and he much regretted that he had ever voted against the Catholic claims. So firm were his sentiments upon the subject, that as long as he should have a seat in that House, no consideration whatever would induce him to withhold his support from the measures intended to relieve the Catholics from their political disqualifications.
He duly voted for the relief bill’s third reading, 10 May 1825. He divided against going into committee on the Bank Charter Acts, 13 Feb. 1826, but he was not listed in any of the known minorities on the promissory notes bill during that month. He voted for altering the representation of Edinburgh, 13 Apr. (as he had, 26 Feb. 1824), parliamentary reform, 27 Apr., and curbing electoral bribery, 26 May. Like George James Robarts he divided in favour of taking the corn laws into consideration, 18 Apr., and probably witnessed his brother’s dramatic collapse in the House later that day. His last recorded votes that session were for inquiries into the state of the nation, 4 May, and the petition of James Silk Buckingham† on the liberty of the press in India, 9 May 1826.
Robarts offered again at the general election that summer, receiving cordial support at a meeting in Maidstone, 5 June 1826. However, the popularity of Wells, combined with the entry of the wealthy Wyndham Lewis*, led to expectations of a spirited contest: and one correspondent in the Kentish Chronicle of 9 June wrote that ‘Mr. Robarts has every weapon to contend against that bigotry, ignorance and venality can wield and invent. The timely and vigorous perseverance of his friends will, however, secure his election’.
Robarts divided for repeal of the Test Acts, 26 Feb., and Catholic relief, 12 May 1828. He voted against extending the franchise of East Retford to the freeholders of Bassetlaw, 21 Mar., for information on civil list pensions, 20 May, and for inquiry into the circulation of small promissory notes, 5 June. He cited urgent business as the reason for missing an anti-Brunswick dinner in Maidstone, but pledged his support for relief by letter, 21 Dec. 1828. At the meeting on the 23rd, one of his principal supporters, Charles Ellis, said that Robarts was the ‘first gentleman that was ever returned from this town, at the same time avowing his sentiments to be favourable to Catholic emancipation’.
With a dissolution looming, Robarts offered again at Maidstone at the end of June 1830 and engaged in some active canvassing. Wells retired, but was replaced by Alderman Henry Winchester, while two independents also entered.
Robarts voted for the second reading of the reintroduced reform bill, 6 July, at least twice against adjourning proceedings on it, 12 July 1831, and steadily for its details. He paired against extending the county franchise to town freeholders, 17 Aug., and divided against censuring the Irish government for using undue influence in the Dublin election, 23 Aug. He voted for the third reading, 19 Sept., and passage of the reform bill, 21 Sept., and for Lord Ebrington’s confidence motion, 10 Oct. He divided in favour of the second reading of the revised bill, 17 Dec. 1831, going into committee on it, 20 Jan., 20 Feb. 1832, and again usually for its details. He voted for its third reading, 22 Mar., Ebrington’s motion for an address calling on the king to appoint only ministers who would carry it unimpaired, 10 May, and the second reading of the Irish bill, 25 May. At the Inflexible Society dinner, 13 Aug., he denied that he had tried to turn Maidstone into a close borough by dragging in Barnett with him, and claimed that he had ‘sat up night after night, at the expense of my health and the sacrifice of all domestic comfort’ in order to defend schedules A and B.
He was appointed to the committee of secrecy on renewing the Bank of England charter, 22 Mar. 1832. According to Charles Arbuthnot*, 14 June, Robarts and John Smith were the members of this committee who most feared being at the mercies of a reformed Parliament
both having voted through thick and thin for the bill, and both so unwilling to be the victims of their own law that they yesterday in the committee told Lord Althorp [the chairman] that, if they were not given time to report, the Bank and the monied interest would be so alarmed that they would call in all their accommodations and close their accounts, which would cause the greatest confusion and embarrassment. Can you conceive such villainy as forcing upon the country a law which they themselves consider dangerous?
Aberdeen Univ. Lib. Arbuthnot mss 3029/2/1/31.
After he had offered again at Maidstone, he apologized to his constituents, 9 July, for having to return immediately to London for this committee, which he called ‘a subject of the most vital importance to the best interests of the country’.
Robarts told me that the Bank committee had executed their laborious duties in a spirit of great cordiality, and with a general disposition to lay aside all political differences and concur in accomplishing the best results ... He told me that the evidence all went to prove that little improvement could be made in the management of the Bank.
Greville Mems. ii. 317.
He was again successful at the general election of 1832, being returned as a Liberal with Barnett against Lewis, despite refusing to engage in bribery.
A reformer, and supports all Whig and reforming governments; but he does so (like many others) from fear. What he most dreads is collision, and most desires is quiet, and he thinks non-resistance the best way.
Greville Mems. iii. 133.
He left Parliament in 1837, but continued to pursue his career in banking, becoming chairman of the committee of bankers, and also indulged his passion for paintings, mainly Dutch, of which he established a fine collection.
