Tudway, the third generation of his family to represent Wells, in an unbroken succession dating back to 1754, had effectively inherited the seat in 1815 from his uncle Clement, along with properties in Somerset and the 1,096-acre Parham Hill plantation in Antigua.
He was a very poor attender and is not known to have spoken in debate. He divided with Lord Liverpool’s ministry against more extensive tax reductions, 11 Feb. 1822. A radical publication of 1823 exaggerated only slightly when it claimed that there was ‘no trace of this man’s attendance’ during the previous three sessions.
He died in June 1835, ‘a martyr to that excruciating tormentor, the gout’.
