Webb’s elder brother John went to Bengal as a writer in the East India Company’s service in 1790 and returned home on the death of their father, Member for Gloucester, in 1795. By his father’s will Edward was left £4,000 to be invested at 4 per cent until he came of age, plus a sum of £1,000 to be paid to him on the death of his mother. Both bequests were additional to his entitlement under his parents’ marriage settlement.
By 1811 he had acquired Gloucestershire estates at Stoke Bishop and Norton Court, plus land in Monmouthshire containing lead mines and leasehold property in Worcestershire and Berkshire.
Webb was elected to Brooks’s, 11 June 1817, signed the requisition to Tierney in 1818 and voted regularly with the opposition, though his attendance evidently lapsed between Easter 1818 and the dissolution. He opposed the seditious meetings bill, 24 Feb.; the suspension of habeas corpus, 26 Feb. and 23 June; the appointment of the secret committee of inquiry into combinations, 5 June 1817, and the domestic espionage system and indemnity bill in February and March 1818. He voted for reception of the Lymington reform petition, 11 Feb.; for Burdett’s parliamentary reform motion, 20 May 1817 (but not for that of 1 July 1819), and for inquiry into Scottish burgh reform, 6 May 1819. In the emergency session of 1819 he voted for the amendment to the address, 24 Nov., and for inquiry into the state of the nation, 30 Nov., and went on to oppose the seditious meetings bill root and branch and to vote against the night searches provisions of the seizure of arms bill, 14 and 18 Dec. He is not known to have spoken in the House before 1820.
Webb died at New York, 18 Sept. 1839, having been taken ill during a visit to Niagara with his daughter.
