Tyrwhitt’s father left him a half share in £5,150 Bank and South Sea stock,
Tyrwhitt, who joined the Whig Club in 1786 but seceded with Windham and company in February 1793, spent most of his first year in the Prince’s employment handling his master’s financial negotiations with government and problems arising out of his separation from Princess Caroline. With a grant from the Prince of 2,500 acres of duchy land on Dartmoor he established a position for himself in south Devon by cultivating his moorland and building a house at Tor Royal. He was primarily responsible for the establishment of Dartmoor prison, started in 1806 to house prisoners of war, and named the community which grew around it Princetown.
As Tyrwhitt was in touch with Moira, Sinclair and other members of the ‘armed neutrality’ early in 1797, it seems likely that it was he who attended their meeting at Sinclair’s, 9 Mar., and voted with opposition on the Bank stoppage, 28 Feb. and 9 Mar., and the state of Ireland, 23 Mar., though it is possible that the Member concerned was Thomas Tyrwhitt Drake.
I hate politics, but having lately been more concerned in them than usual I must touch upon them. I have long conceived that the secession of the opposition ... did infinite mischief ... If they know themselves the spirits with which their conduct invigorates the enemy, they deserve to be hanged for persisting in it ... I really believe some of them would let in the French provided Pitt was made the sacrifice.
Add. 37308, f. 106.
He supported the income tax, 31 Dec. 1798, and on 8 Mar. 1799, ‘well aware that by my silence malevolence might have fancied a debt of £100,000’, stated in answer to a question from Colonel Lowther that the Prince had strictly complied with the terms of his financial settlement and maintained his daughter without incurring any debts. ‘I am not vain enough to say I did it well’, he informed the Prince, but ‘the House expressed uncommon satisfaction when I sat down and I have since been told that it was pleased as much as I was in hopes it would [be]’.
On his return from another errand to Vienna early in 1802, Tyrwhitt was reported to be saying in private that ‘abroad, there is no confidence in the vigour or stability of the present ministry’; but in the House, 19 Jan. 1802, he ‘sat on the Treasury bench and rose, apropos of nothing, to express his perfect confidence’ in the Addington government’s ability to thwart any act of aggression by France, a gesture seen as ‘a little symptomatic of an avowed junction between the two courts of St. James’s and Carlton House’.
Tyrwhitt did not stand for Okehampton at the 1802 general election, the Prince having sold his property there. Callington, Enniskillen and Stockbridge were mentioned as possible berths for him. The co-patron of Stockbridge, Joseph Foster Barham, who had negotiated a seat for Portarlington for the benefit of a friend, transferred it to Tyrwhitt to gratify the Prince. In December 1802, after a visit to France, he was returned for Lord Portarlington’s borough, on the understanding that he was to relinquish the seat once the House had debated the Prince’s financial problems, which was thought to be a matter of six weeks. Subsequently Foster Barham was induced to permit him to hold on to the seat, with expectations of compensation from the Prince. (In 1806 Tyrwhitt secured Foster Barham’s return for Okehampton in acknowledgment of his services.)
Tyrwhitt’s belief in lack of public confidence in the Addington ministry remained privately expressed
On the Prince’s instructions he stayed away from the House for the crucial divisions of 23 and 25 Apr. 1804 which sealed Addington’s fate, but when the Prince shortly afterwards ‘declared openly for opposition’ and summoned him from Devon, he came to town and voted against Pitt’s additional force bill in June.
Shortly after the formation of the ‘Talents’ ministry Tyrwhitt arranged the transfer of his Portarlington seat to a government supporter and his own return for Plymouth, where he had been cultivating an interest in the name of the Prince, the high steward. He voted for the repeal of the Additional Force Act, 30 Apr., and defended Lord St. Vincent (an electoral ally at Plymouth) against Jeffery’s attack on his naval administration, 14 May, but opposed the witnesses declaratory bill as unnecessary, 23 Apr. 1806. He was re-elected for Plymouth after a contest at the general election of 1806 but, like the Prince’s other acolytes, did not support the ‘Talents’ when they came to grief over Catholic relief. His prospects at Plymouth now seemed uncertain: on 9 Apr. 1807 Sir William Elford, ousted in the previous contest, told the Duke of Portland’s secretary that Tyrwhitt was ‘insinuating that he will be with the new government’; and three weeks later he trusted that, if ministers were to support Tyrwhitt’s election, he would be ‘given to understand he is to play no underhand game, which is a practice as you know, very much to his taste’.
Tyrwhitt remained largely inconspicuous in the Commons, where his attempts to establish a police force for Plymouth dockyard, 8 June 1808 and 3 Mar. 1809, were unsuccessful. A strong advocate of the Prince’s neutrality on the Duke of York scandal, he initially carried his point and was ordered ‘not to vote, but to talk against’ the duke; but when the Prince, under pressure from Windsor, changed his mind, Tyrwhitt was left free to stay away.
do not betray me ... but I smell a possibility of being asked to vote for the address, which I should not like to do— against, you know I could not, after what has been written to the Great Castle. I therefore shall have my first fit of the gout towards the 19th.
According to James Loch’s report to Adam, 21 Mar. 1810, Tyrwhitt, with whom he had spent the previous night ‘making out a list for Carlton House’, was ‘pressing for permission to vote’ with opposition in the crucial division on the Walcheren expedition.
During the King’s illness late in 1810 Tyrwhitt supplied Lord Grenville’s emissary with daily bulletins of news at Eton. Like McMahon, he did not vote on the motion for an adjournment, 29 Nov., but divided with opposition on the question, 20 Dec. On his own initiative he suggested to Adam an alteration to the opposition amendment opposing all Regency restrictions, 31 Dec., proposing a concession over custody of the King’s person and arguing that opposition in limine would ‘lose many a vote’.
Tyrwhitt was instructed by the Prince to vote with government against Whitbread’s motion in favour of Palmer’s financial claims, 30 May 1811, and was ‘actually sent for from Cornwall’ to join the rest of the Carlton House coterie in attending ‘from first to last’ to support the gold coin bill. In July 1811, when the King was thought to be dying, he was reported to be ‘very busy about the elections’ and to have secured berths for ‘six fresh thick and thin’ adherents of the Prince.
Reports in January 1812 that Tyrwhitt had been ‘employed in going over the Treasury lists with Arbuthnot’ convinced Lord Grey that the Regent intended to desert the Whigs when the restrictions expired, though Richard Ryder, the Home secretary, did not know what to make of Tyrwhitt’s circular to the Prince’s friends requesting attendance on the first day.
[he] agreed ... [opposition] played their cards ill, and particularly the Grenvilles, in pushing the question of Ireland. And yet, I said, they give out that they are to come in as soon as the restrictions are off. All I know, said he, is that they shall never give me a place, they did not do it before, and they should not now! He agreed that Ireland was much discontented, and great management required, but the way opposition took was not the right one.
Buckingham, Regency, i. 180, 229; Phipps, Plumer Ward Mems. i. 412.
Once the Regent had opted for the status quo, Tyrwhitt voted regularly with ministers, received a knighthood early in May and was in the minority who divided against the call for a stronger administration, 21 May 1812. When the ensuing period of uncertainty was over and Liverpool’s ministry confirmed in power, his confident expectations of reward were confirmed by his appointment as gentleman usher of the black rod, which necessitated the vacation of his seat.
It was said of him in 1813 that ‘the rays of royalty have not infused an atom of humbug into him, and he appears to be as anxious to please the whole world as he would be to please his master’.
