Scourfield, the first of his family to sit in Parliament, was the son of a country gentleman who transferred the family seat from upland Pembrokeshire to Robeston Hall, near Milford Haven, purchased from the pioneer industrialist Thomas Kymer. He owned 12,000 acres in the county with a rental of £3,000 p.a. and proceeded to rebuild his upland home of New Moat.
Milford, writing to Lord Liverpool, 20 June 1820, claimed that Scourfield, ‘who votes with the administration’, owed his seat to him; William Holmes, writing to Peel, 9 Dec. 1823, thought Scourfield held the seat in opposition to Milford’s interest.
