Smith was a well-to-do dissenting merchant family’s hostage to public life.
Unexpectedly defeated at Sudbury in 1790, Smith had to buy his way into Parliament at the first opening, on the Phillipps interest at Camelford: he later admitted that ‘perhaps the manner of his election would not be sanctioned by the public approbation’. He had supported government in his first Parliament; moreover, he ‘supported the measures of Mr Pitt, so long as he believed that minister to be the sincere advocate of reform, and of liberal principles’.
The prospect of war with revolutionary France and the failure of his personal bid to mediate between Pitt and a French agent, Maret, in November 1792 completed Smith’s conversion to Fox. On 13 Dec. 1792 he defended the French from the imputation of wishing to subvert the English constitution and the dissenters from charges of disaffection. From that day forward he voted steadily with Fox, though he did not join the Whig Club until 2 Jan. 1796. On 18 Feb. 1793 he made it clear that he was a pacifist on principle. He defended petitions for parliamentary reform, 21 Feb., 6 May. On 18 June, advocating negotiation with France, he pointed out that the cruelty of the French revolutionaries had been equalled in past ages by monarchs: perhaps this was the origin of his nickname, ‘King Killer’ Smith. He interceded for the unitarian minister Thomas Fyshe Palmer, sentenced to transportation, 24 Feb. 1794, and opposed the landing of foreign troops in England, 10 Feb., 14 Mar. He deplored the excesses of war, 17 Mar., doubting whether it was necessary in the first place, and deprecated the enlistment of émigrés, 14, 17 Apr. He was even at pains to point out that the Catholic officers relief bill was not endorsed by protestant dissenters. That he was a pacifist and not a revolutionary was underlined, though in a fashion calculated to give him a jacobinical reputation, 3 May 1794, when he was questioned by the Privy Council as to his communications with a Francophile radical agent William Jackson, to whom he had written discounting fear of a French invasion of England. This was the occasion of the flight abroad of his less prudent friend Benjamin Vaughan. Smith was one of the Friends of Freedom who celebrated the fiasco of the first treason trials. Subsequently he was a witness (28 Jan. 1796) in the trial for treason of William Stone. On 26 Jan. 1795 he seconded Grey’s motion for a peace bid and on 5 Feb. was teller against the loan to the Emperor, on whose credit he threw doubt then and on 23 Feb: he noted, moreover (28 May, 3 June) that the loan was not on terms advantageous to the Emperor. He was an opponent of the erection of barracks, 20 Feb. His attitude to the problem of the Prince of Wales’s debts was ambivalent, 14 May, but he preferred recourse to the civil list, 5 June, unless complete satisfaction could be given to the public on the subject. On 31 May he chaired the meeting of the Friends of the People that adopted Philip Francis’s plan for parliamentary reform, privately admitting that it would be some time before public opinion swallowed it. He himself deprecated universal suffrage, short parliaments and the payment of Members, whom he regarded as conscientious representatives of the people, not delegates.
Smith was a prominent critic, in and out of the House, of the legislation against sedition in November 1795.
In 1796 Smith regained his seat for Sudbury, proclaiming to the electors his wish for peace and his hostility to coercion at home. He added that a change of government was the best way to obtain these objects. (The address was sent to Pitt, with its most provocative statements underlined, by an alarmist.
Smith did not secede with Fox. On 31 May 1797 he was in the House impugning the claims to patriotism of subscribers to public loans, who stood to profit by them, and insisting that interested parties should be prevented from voting on the question. On 2 June he stood by ministers against the naval mutineers, but next day found fault with their bill to prevent sedition in the forces. He objected to the newspaper duties bill, 14 June 1797. On 27 June he carried a clause enabling protestant dissenters, as well as Roman Catholics, to serve as militia and supplementary cavalry officers without violation of their consciences. On 3 Jan. 1798 he opposed the assessed taxes, which would be wasted on the war effort, and two days later opposed the exemption of the royal family from them. That session he made his personal mark in a bid to mitigate the evils of the slave trade, 3, 30 Apr., carrying two motions to limit the number of slaves carried per ship and to guarantee a minimum space to each slave carried, 10 May. If enacted, as an anti-abolitionist Member observed, these would have amounted to ‘a virtual abolition of the trade’, but then and next session they were frustrated (14 Mar. 1799). On 14 June 1798 he supported Sheridan’s motion for inquiry into the Irish rebellion.
Smith and Tierney were the only prominent members of the opposition who attended regularly against the income tax bill, 14-31 Dec. 1798.
Remaining in opposition during Addington’s ministry, Smith handled him more gently than he had Pitt and had much less to say in debate. He supported the Bank forgery bill, 30 Apr. 1801, and the ministry’s efforts to equalize taxation as between Britain and Ireland, 1, 14 May 1801, but was a critic of the indemnity bill, 5 June. Fox, writing to Smith on 15 Nov. 1801, supposed that he shared his indifference to Addington.
He was steady in his opposition to Pitt’s second ministry: though they retained a common interest in the abolition of the slave trade, which Smith again advocated, 30 May, 7, 12, 27 June 1804. He joined the attack on the lord advocate of Scotland, 22 June 1804; on the salt duty, 7 Mar. 1805 (on behalf of the herring fisheries); was for leniency towards the printer of the Oracle for breach of privilege, 26 Apr.; voted but did not speak against Melville; advocated Catholic relief, 14 May; thought Pitt had not cleared himself in the matter of his dealings with Boyd & Co., 14 June; opposed the allied subsidy, 21 June, and the Duke of Atholl’s claims to compensation, 21 June, 1 July 1805. He spoke against public honours for Pitt or payment of his debts, 27 Jan., 3 Feb. 1806.
Smith was precluded from office when his friends came to power in 1806 and he several times expressed disagreement with them. He supported Hamilton’s motion for information on Indian affairs, 21 Apr. 1806, and called on the House to give a fair hearing to James Paull when he launched his attack on Lord Wellesley’s Indian administration, 23 Apr., though he soon found out that he could not support Paull’s procedure (28 Apr.). Consistency obliged him to oppose the property tax, 25 Apr., 7, 12, 15, 28 May, and he disliked the iron duty, 28 Apr., 9 May. He approved the tax on private brewers, 19 May, and was disappointed when it was given up, 6 June. Having voted for the repeal of the Additional Force Act (30 Apr.), he defended Windham’s training bill, 24 June, and saw no harm in extending it to school children, 4 July. On 2 July, anticipating Fox’s death, he wrote to Viscount Howick, urging him to take the lead and to ‘sacrifice to popularity more than you have ever hitherto done’.
In 1807 Smith thought of contesting Worcester, but was on the road to Bridport, another dissenters’ haven for which he had been invited to stand, when he was recalled to Norwich.
Smith’s brewing interest was occasionally a cause of his contributions to debate. On 14 Dec. 1801 he had got up to deny that distillation from wheat was current practice. In 1804 and 1805 he had something to say on the corn bill. In 1806, as stated, he supported the tax on private brewing. In May 1808 he was a critic of the preference for sugar distillation, which he believed would do no practical good to the beleaguered West India planters, while it would damage the British agricultural interest. He attacked the corn distillery prohibition bill, 23 Feb. 1809, and again, 13 Feb. 1810, 11 Mar., 9 Apr. and 14 June 1811.
In the session of 1809 Smith was a critic of foreign policy at the outset (20 Jan.) and called for another bid for peace, although he had toasted the Spanish resistance to Buonaparte and had approved the rejection of the last negotiation. He took a prominent part in the investigation of the charges against the Duke of York in February, complaining privately of the effect on the House of Mrs Clarke’s figure and manner,
Smith supported the inquiry into the Scheldt expedition, 26 Jan. 1810. On 2 Feb. he made a fool of himself by a self-appointed bid to substitute Davies Giddy for the inexperienced Lushington as chairman of committees: the Speaker pointed out that he could not properly do so.
Smith took the opportunity, during the Regency debates, 31 Dec. 1810, to contrast his present support for an unrestricted Regency with the contrary line he had taken in 1788. He disapproved of Perceval’s mode of proceeding on the question, 15 Jan. 1811. He opposed the grant of commercial credit to distressed merchants without further investigation, 11, 18 Mar. He was a critic of Bank profits, and, on the bullion report, 14 May, called for the resumption of cash payments at parliamentary discretion. He supported the Catholic relief petition, 31 May, claiming that religious liberty should be extended to all sectaries as a matter of right. He opposed the reinstatement of the Duke of York as commander-in-chief of the army, 6 June. While eschewing the extra-parliamentary agitation of the Friends of Constitutional Reform, he defended the Kent reform petition, as well as tithe reform, 11 June. On 25 June he called for a revision of the property tax to alleviate the burden on the poorer classes. He opposed the bank-note bill, 17 July, and argued for the exclusion of Bank directors from voting on it: on 26 Mar. 1812, still hostile, he described it as a prelude to national bankruptcy.
On 6 Aug. 1811 Smith wrote to William Adam that his prospects at the next election at Norwich might depend on the Whigs being brought into office by the Regent. He was not disposed to purchase a seat, nor, owing to his ‘age, and standing ... to enter the lists against any new adventurer on the political stage at any accidental opening’. He concluded: ‘Retirement, therefore, or retaining my present seat, seem to me almost my only alternatives’.
Smith’s anxieties about Norwich were dispelled at the election of 1812, when he headed the poll with ease. He remained an active Member in the ensuing Parliament. At the outset, he pointed out the rising cost of warfare against a background of currency depreciation, 1 Dec. He still objected to making bank-notes legal tender, 1 Dec. On 25 Feb. 1813, after presenting two metropolitan dissenters’ petitions, he pledged himself to support the same religious liberty for Catholics as he wished for Protestants. He expressed sympathy for the plight of the Princess of Wales, 5 Mar. He was a critic of enlistment for life in the army, 8 Mar. He doubted if the sinecure offices bill would satisfy the public, 29 Mar. On 5 May he was given leave for a bill to relieve Unitarians from the penalties of the statutes against them of William III’s reign. He opposed the leather tax as harmful to the trade and to the poor consumer, 18, 20 May. He favoured American loyalist claims, 20 May. He was active in the debates on the renewal of the East India Company charter, both as an opponent of the Company monopoly in trade and government, which he regarded as inadequate for the welfare of the Indian masses, and as a propagandist for Christian missionary activity: his religious toleration did not extend to Hindu practices, 28 June 1813. He did not succeed in a bid to exclude the secret ballot from Company proceedings, 13 July. He favoured the disfranchisement of Helston in favour of a more populous district elsewhere, 30 June. On 14 July he supported Wilberforce’s call for pressure on Portugal to abandon the slave trade.
Smith stated himself to be well disposed to the militia volunteering bill, 18 Nov. 1813, in anticipation of peace, but wished this justification to be inserted in the preamble. He called for a delay on the East Indian sugar duties in view of the uneasy competition with West Indian sugar and the need for comparison between the two regions as markets for British manufactured goods. He was opposed to the public ‘decollation’, but not to the private dissection, of capital offenders, 25 Apr. 1814. He favoured revision of the antiquated apprenticeship laws, though his constituents had petitioned against it, 27 Apr. 13 May. He congratulated the House on the swing of opinion, even among those most involved, towards the international abolition of the slave trade, 2 May. He was a champion of Norwegian independence, 27 Apr., 12 May, 30 July. The alteration of the Corn Laws was a delicate question for Smith, but he did not shirk it. He proposed delay, 13 May 1814; then, seconding the motion for a select committee on 20 May, admitted that he was at present opposed to any further protection. This view was endorsed by 12,000 of his constituents in a petition he presented on 6 June, but he would not commit himself entirely. He was at this time a champion of the English distillers against the Irish (1, 20, 24, 30 June). On 17 May 1814 he introduced a bill to prevent child stealing. On 15 June he described some of the abuses which made the madhouse bill desirable. He called for regulation of the abuses in the courts of justice caused by the fees system, 28 June 1814, 21 Feb. 1815. He was an admirer of Castlereagh as a peacemaker; he refused to support Horner’s motion censuring Castlereagh for neglect of the international abolition of the slave trade, 27 June, and two days later paid fulsome tribute to his diplomatic achievements. He hoped, however, for military retrenchment, 4, 11 July 1814, and criticized the civil list, 14 July. He suggested, 17 Feb. 1815, that if ministers lifted the tax burden (as they had said they would), the need for further protection to the agricultural interest would be diminished: but on 28 Feb. he opposed the alteration of the Corn Laws, in the consumer’s interest, and on 6, 8 and 10 Mar., without instruction, he claimed, from his constituents, he again called for delay and opposed alteration. He queried the assumption that nine-tenths of the French favoured a Bourbon restoration, 7 Apr. 1815, being sure that Buonaparte was their favourite. Retrenchment was now his theme: of the civil list, 14 Apr. 1815, of the property tax, in which he concurred with his constituents, 19, 20, 21 Apr., and of the naval estimates, 24 Apr. If the property tax were retained for more than a year, it would need ‘extensive pruning’, 1 May. He opposed the transfer of Genoa, 27 Apr. 1815, and the subsidizing of Holland, 12 June, and accepted the abandonment of Norwegian independence only on the understanding that the Norwegians were satisfied with their new rulers, 13 June. On 18 May 1815 he introduced a bill to prevent embezzlement of the property of the poor (i.e. common or waste lands). He welcomed regulation of child labour in cotton mills, 6 June. He was a spokesman for the chapel exemption bill, 16 June. He was invariably a friend of public support for the British Museum, which fostered ‘mental improvement’, 21 June 1815. He was in favour of the purchase of an estate for the Duke of Wellington, 23 June. He continued to inveigh against the foreign slave trade, 5 May, 5, 12 July. Despite this, Lady Shelley reported that as his dinner guest, 16 Aug. 1815, he ‘toadied Castlereagh considerably ... He abused Whitbread—so much for political friendships!’
Smith’s contributions to debate for several years past had become so frequent that the House must occasionally have grown weary of him. This would be a rational inference from the sententious tone he frequently adopted, but it is supported by evidence that he overstepped the limit of their endurance; as when on 9 June 1815 he opposed the Duke of Cumberland’s marriage grant by reference to the moral superiority of the Duke of Kent over his brother. On 18 Mar. 1816 (after presenting a petition from Norwich to the effect on 26 Feb.) he was not satisfied with denouncing the property tax but went on to attack Pitt’s record as a financier, which sentenced the House to the even greater tedium of a defence of Pitt by George Rose. On 9 May he seconded Althorp’s motion against the leather tax, but agreed, during the debate, to support the amendment to it. On 30 May he brought in his postponed motion to expose the abuse of extents-in-aid whereby the crown ‘gave to one creditor what belonged jointly to all’: but he failed to carry a committee of inquiry by 65 votes to 56 and Ponsonby, his leader, who thought he had a good case, could not rescue it. (Smith obtained a select committee on the subject on 10 June 1817.) On 25 June 1816 he called for national victory monuments to be useful and not merely decorative.
Smith’s efforts in debate in the session of 1817 were no happier. On 29 Jan. he complained of the discourtesy of the Lords in keeping the Commons waiting for a conference. He had scruples about a petition for reform from Norwich which he was asked to present, 4 Feb., as he could not say its language was unobjectionable, having made it clear to his constituents that he disliked visionary plans of reform. After involving the House in a tedious debate he saw his scruples swallowed up in the House’s rejection of the petition. He supported economical reform at the Admiralty, 17 Feb. 1817, and opposed the suspension of habeas corpus, which he tried to obstruct, 28 Feb. He claimed that the seditious meetings bill seemed to be designed to prevent meetings to promote parliamentary reform, 10 Mar., and complained of the publicity given to the notion that Norwich was a hot-bed of sedition, 14 Mar. In the same debate he attacked the poet laureate Southey as a political turncoat: but Southey had a friend to defend him in Charles Williams Wynn and the episode did not redound to Smith’s credit. He voiced his objections to the salt duties, 25 Apr. He presented the petition for Catholic relief from the Warwickshire and Staffordshire Catholics, 28 Apr. He called for a Game Law reform which would discourage poaching, a habit that usually led to worse thieving, 5 May. The same day, justifying his vote for sinecure reform in 1812, he said that he had then swallowed the notion of compensation, to achieve ‘by a smaller evil ... a greater good’. He thought the House should not insist on its privileges so strongly in view of the glare of publicity that now attended its proceedings, 7 May. He was in favour of the employment of the poor in public works, even if their cost was thereby increased, 21 May. Opposing the renewal of the suspension of habeas corpus, 5 June, he exonerated Norwich from accusations of sedition and suggested that only disaffected districts should be involved. He called for the reform of burgage boroughs, 11, 18 June. On 9 July he suggested that, to lower taxation, the interest on the national debt be reduced by the application of the sinking fund to it.
Smith put up a defence for William Hone, the prosecuted radical bookseller, 3, 4, Feb. 1818. On 10 Feb. he defended a petition for shorter hours in cotton factories, testifying that the operatives were prepared to accept lower wages accordingly. He subsequently applauded the cotton factories regulation bill, 27 Apr., because it discouraged both child labour and trade unions. He welcomed the Anglo-Spanish treaty against the slave trade, 11 Feb. 1818: he had feared, 9 July 1817, that Spain would not be won over. On 1 June he likewise approved the Anglo-Dutch treaty. On 5 Mar. 1818 he produced evidence damaging to the character of Oliver, the government informer. He opposed the indemnity bill, 13 Mar. On the same day he was a spokesman for the brewers against the charges of price rigging, monopoly and adulteration. He was a critic of the royal dukes’ marriage grants, 15 Apr. Of the legal system he remarked that it was too tender towards property, too little so towards liberty and life, 30 Apr. He advocated gradual reform of the Poor Laws, 7 May. (On 9 Feb. 1819 he was placed on the Poor Law committee.) He favoured the repeal of the Septennial Act, 19 May 1818, but disliked Burdett’s reform motion, 2 June: he preferred ‘rational and discreet reform’. The ill treatment of slaves in the West Indies was a subject that exercised him (and his fellow abolitionists) that session, 22 Apr., 20 May, 3 June.
Smith presided over a Whig triumph at Norwich in the election of 1818. He signed the requisition to Tierney to lead the party. In the ensuing Parliament the House did not hear his voice so regularly, though his attendance did not fall off. On 19 Feb. 1819 he was a spokesman for the neglected claims to compensation of American loyalists. He looked forward to the international abolition of the slave trade, 22 Feb. Defending a Catholic relief petition, 4 Mar., he reminded Dr Phillimore that protestant, as well as Catholic dissenters, were denied office: he himself was precluded from it. A frequent visitor to Scotland since 1786 and a commissioner for Highland improvements since 1803, he was a champion of the Caledonian canal grant, 22 Mar. 1819. Of the reform of the corrupt borough of Barnstaple he said, 2 Apr., that ‘he was happy to take whatever he could get’. His constituents petitioned for two gaol deliveries a year, which he approved, 2 Feb. 1819, and on their behalf he opposed the poor settlement bill, though he was at first in favour of it, 10 May. On 1 July he was obliged to withdraw a bill he had sponsored to allow dissenters (particularly Unitarians) their own marriage ceremonies. In the last session he opposed repressive legislation: he failed to obtain an adjournment of the debate on the seditious meetings bill, 7 Dec.; approved an inquiry into distress in industrial areas, 9 Dec., and, 13 Dec., complained that ministers were curtailing liberty without justification. He also criticized the newspaper stamp duties bill, 20 Dec., and the blasphemous libel bill, 21 Dec. Of the latter he remarked that Christianity was not in need of the support of the civil power and that it smacked of the doctrine that knowledge was the ‘exclusive privilege of a few’.
Smith remained in Parliament until he had secured the removal of the dissenters’ disabilities as citizens. He died 31 May 1835.
