‘Little Monckton’, as Sheridan his colleague for many years in the representation of Stafford called him, was ‘perfectly safe’ in his seat: thanks to his ‘large fortune’, he had nothing to fear from contests in 1790, 1806, and 1807.
Subsequently he seldom voted with the minority: on 31 Mar. 1802 he supported Manners Sutton’s and on 4 Mar. 1803 Calcraft’s motion on the Prince of Wales’s finances. Portland assured Pitt that Monckton would attend his defence bill, ‘if he was able’, 17 June 1804.
Described by Canning in 1795 as ‘a very good sort of little man’, Monckton died, the patriarch of Staffordshire magistrates, 1 July 1832. In a codicil to his will he ordered his Carnatic stock to be invested for the instruction of the natives of Madras in the Christian religion.
