Metham’s estates were near Hull, and in 1757 with the support of the mayor and of Administration he successfully contested the borough. On 26 July, three weeks after the election, Lord Dupplin wrote to Newcastle:
The Duke of Newcastle has been strongly applied to by Sir George Metham’s friends. Sir George is represented to be in very necessitous circumstances, and it is said that he will have a difficulty to be re-chose at Hull. Sir George Metham’s friends therefore wish he might have the vacant commission in the Excise.
That place had been already earmarked by Newcastle. However, in writing to Rockingham on 12 July about ‘gentlemen of the House of Commons not yet named to any office’, he included ‘your friend’ Metham amongst the ‘most material’, suggesting him for the Board of Green Cloth, a place worth £1,000 p.a. and invariably held by a Member of Parliament.
Only one speech by him is reported—stating Hull’s case in a dispute about a Yorkshire turnpike.
Metham died 2 Mar. 1793.
