On 12 Sept. 1753 Henry Pelham wrote about Mitchell to Lord Hardwicke:
Mr. Hussey is a young lawyer greatly attached to the Boscawen family, and one who has a good personal interest in many parts of Cornwall. Lord Falmouth and the Admiral [Edward Boscawen] desired in the beginning of last winter that they might choose this gentleman in one of their boroughs. I told them in the room of one of themselves with all my heart, but I could not think of removing any of those recommended by the King to introduce a stranger, though never so worthy a man. With this they seemed contented, but I heard afterwards that Mr. Hussey had one or two places in view, in one he was to oppose Lord Edgcumbe’s interest [Grampound], and in the other my own. This your Lordship may imagine I greatly objected to, and the Admiral promised to use his interest with Mr. Hussey to give it over, which he did at that time, but being I think Parliament mad he then sends me word that he was invited and could certainly carry it for Mitchell.
In a paper of 22 Mar. 1754, docketted ‘Lord Falmouth’s state of the borough of Mitchell’,
In 1761 he was returned on the Falmouth interest for St. Mawes, and was classed in Bute’s list as ‘Admiralty and Government’. His stature as a lawyer was such that in December 1761 he was considered for the post of solicitor-general. Newcastle opposed his appointment, though he admitted Hussey was ‘a very good and a very amiable man’; while Bute considered he ‘had lately had great things done’ for him.
He turned against Grenville’s Administration over Wilkes. He did not vote with the Opposition in the division of 15 Nov. 1763, but his speech in the debate on Wilkes’s privilege, 24 Nov., was described by George Onslow as ‘the finest ... that ever was made for us’.
Rockingham in July 1765 classed Hussey as ‘doubtful’, but in one of Newcastle’s lists he is put down for the office of attorney-general.
When the Chatham Administration was formed it was generally expected that Hussey would be given a more responsible office. ‘I am anxious to know Mr. Hussey’s sentiments on the present system’, wrote Grafton to Chatham, 17 Oct. 1766; to which Chatham replied: ‘That gentleman’s ability and weight are great indeed, and my esteem and honour for his character the highest imaginable’, and referred Grafton to Camden.
On 25 Apr. 1768 Hussey attended a meeting of men of business to discuss the expulsion of Wilkes. ‘Mr. Hussey was strongly against a second expulsion for the same offence, in being the author of a political libel’, wrote Bradshaw to Grafton; and North: ‘Mr. Hussey will certainly be against expelling Wilkes, though he declared he had not formed his opinion entirely.’
When Camden was dismissed in January 1770 Hussey resigned his office of attorney-general to the Queen. Whether he followed Camden into opposition is not clear, for no further speeches by him are recorded; and he died 11 Sept. 1770.
Hussey was an able lawyer, but not a great parliamentary figure. He was universally respected. Walpole describes him as ‘a very honest man’.
