Mayor, a London brewer with considerable property in Essex, had a ‘strong personal interest and connexion’
On 15 Mar. North stated in the House that ‘he was not personally known to Mr. Mayor’ who had, however, ‘entitled himself to his friendship’ by his strenuous support of ‘the present American measures’.
He is strongly attached to Lord North, and votes with him invariably; but as he is in all his common habits, and general intercourse in life, a very worthy, honest, upright man, no doubt can be entertained that his political bias is the pure effect of sentiment and conviction.
Only two speeches by Mayor are reported, 12 Apr. and 4 May 1780, both opposing a tax on malt. In March 1782 North wrote to the King:
Mr. Mayor has a claim upon the public for very diligent labours, and a very essential assistance in amending the tax upon paper. Lord North has not been able to reward him and therefore thinks himself obliged to state his merit to his Majesty.
A pension of £1,000 was given to him, and appears in the list of pensions communicated to Rockingham 21 Apr. 1782, and to Shelburne 17 July 1782. In August 1782 John Robinson noted in a parliamentary survey for Shelburne that Mayor ‘has rendered services to the revenue, and has expectations of office as a reward’.
A plan for an office to control the supply of government stationery was submitted by Mayor to the Treasury on 4 Jan. 1784,
Mayor died 23 Sept. 1817 ‘at a very advanced age’.
