Tullamore was considered by Thomas Creevey* to be ‘justly entitled to the prize as by far the greatest bore the world can produce’.
it will be of the most serious inconvenience to me, to be forced to accept this office, as I have business of a most pressing nature in France in the end of spring ... and some important business solely for the benefit of the county, that I am most anxious to bring forward on the grand jury ... My father also intended returning me to Parliament, should there be an election next year, which of course my appointment as sheriff will prevent and will be a great mortification to me ... I trust that from these reasons you will use your influence to prevent my appointment.
Peel’s response, that he had ‘never before’ received such an application but would transmit the letter to the lord lieutenant, prompted Tullamore to ‘regret’ that his request had been deemed ‘so unusual’ and to apologize ‘for the liberty I took’, following which Peel enclosed ‘a private letter’ from Goulburn, the Irish secretary, ‘which will prove ... that Mr. Peel did not neglect his lordship’s late communication and will perhaps remove some of Lord Tullamore’s difficulties’. Excused from the office shortly thereafter, Tullamore assured Peel of ‘how very kind and friendly I consider your interference in my favour with the Irish government, and shall always feel mindful of it’, 23 Dec. 1824.
At the 1826 general election Tullamore was returned in absentia for the family’s pocket borough of Carlow, which his father, an Irish representative peer from 1801, had intermittently placed at government disposal since the Union.
Charleville’s former relations towards government will I think justify me in asking you as the representative of your family in the House of Commons, whether I am to consider those relations ... still subsist. Of course I am not supposing that an independent Member of Parliament is to pledge his vote and attendance in Parliament for a situation in the stamp office for his nominee, but I think the lord lieutenant in receiving such an application has a claim to inquire without giving offence, whether your view of those measures of last session to which you were opposed, is such as to place you in opposition to the administration, or whether, as I hope and wish, that government as at present constituted may indulge a reasonable expectation of receiving your general support.
NAI, Leveson Gower letterbks. 7. B3. 22.
His reply has not been found. On the address, 4 Feb. 1830, however, he insisted that national distress had been ‘exaggerated’ by opposition Members and cited returns from Lancashire and Chesterfield showing an increase in the domestic consumption of cotton.
At the 1830 general election the Carlow returning officer refused to grant a poll to an opposition candidate and Tullamore came in unopposed.
gradually dwindled down to about twenty-five people, headed by Stormont, Tullamore and Brudenell (three asses), while the government kept 180 together ... There is still a rabble of opposition, tossed about by every wind of folly and passion, and left to the vagaries and eccentricities of Wetherell, or Attwood, or Sadler, or the intemperate zeal of such weak fanatics as the three lords above, but for a grave, deliberate, efficient opposition there seem to be no longer the elements.
Greville Mems. ii. 165.
Tullamore divided for use of the 1831 census to determine the disfranchisement schedules, 19 July, and to postpone consideration of the inclusion of Chippenham in B, 27 July. He voted against the bill’s passage, 21 Sept., and the second reading of the Scottish bill, 23 Sept. He denied that the Carlow grand jury had drunk ‘offensive toasts’ in the aftermath of the Newtownbarry massacre, 9 Aug. He presented a petition from a Tullamore distiller against the malt duty regulations, 14 Sept. He divided for a cessation of the Maynooth grant, 26 Sept. He expressed ‘surprise and disgust’ at the ministry’s appointments of ‘absentee’ Irish lord lieutenants, which were ‘a grievous insult to the resident nobility and gentry’, 6 Oct. 1831.
Tullamore voted against the second reading of the revised reform bill, 17 Dec. 1831, going into committee on it, 20 Jan., the enfranchisement of Tower Hamlets, 28 Feb., and the third reading, 22 Mar. 1832. He divided against the second reading of the Irish bill, 25 May. He voted against ministers on the Russian-Dutch loan, 26 Jan., 12 July. On 18 Apr. he obtained leave for a bill to transfer the King’s County assizes from Philipstown to the more ‘conveniently situated’ Tullamore. The bill was read a second time, 23 May, when he argued that Philipstown had ‘not kept pace with the times’ and was ‘no longer eligible for these purposes’. He presented a petition hostile to the bill the following day but two more in its favour, 30 May, when he denied having any ‘improper motives’ or involvement with the earlier transfer of Philipstown gaol to Tullamore, which had occurred when he was ‘in Naples, given over by my medical attendants, and supposed to be on the point of death ... and my father was also in Italy very unwell’. He was a majority teller for the bill that day and again on 1 June, when he clashed with George Ponsonby, whose family owned property in Philipstown. The bill was read a third time, 6 June, amended by the Lords, 22 June, and received royal assent, 4 July (2 & 3 Gul. IV, c. 60).
At the 1832 general election Tullamore retired from Carlow, which had been opened by the Reform Act. He came forward on the family interest for King’s County, but withdrew to contest Penryn and Falmouth, where he was returned as a Conservative.
