Talbot’s father, grandson of William Talbot, bishop of Durham 1721-30, and nephew of Charles, Lord Talbot, lord chancellor 1733-7, was described in 1806 as a lawyer (he had entered the Middle Temple in 1750) who ‘repaired occasionally to Ireland, for the purpose of improving the estates of some of the great landowners there, in which capacity he at once acquired wealth and reputation’.
Sir Charles Talbot was returned for Lord Bath’s pocket borough of Weobley on a vacancy in 1800 as a supporter of administration. He failed to find a seat in 1802, though evidently had designs on one for Lord Radnor’s borough of Downton.
In 1812, when Sidmouth was back in office, Talbot was returned on the Kenrick interest for Bletchingley, which lay about eight miles from his Surrey property, but he died 3 Nov. 1812, three weeks before the new Parliament met.
