Lord Nuneham was returned after a contest on the Spencer interest at St. Albans. His father was a courtier: had been governor to George III when Prince of Wales, was sent to Mecklenburg in 1761 to escort the future Queen to England, and was appointed her master of the horse. Naturally Nuneham was expected to adhere to the court. In Bute’s list of 1761 he is marked ‘Bute’, and he appears in Fox’s list of Members favourable to the peace preliminaries. On 7 Nov. 1762 Harcourt wrote to Charles Jenkinson:
I have wrote to Lord Bute about Lord Nuneham, but my letter to his Lordship is far from being pressing. I have expressed my desire to see Lord Nuneham in his Majesty’s service but I have left it entirely at large, to take place now, or hereafter, whichever may be most convenient to his Majesty or his Administration.
Nuneham received no appointment, and probably did not desire one. He was of little political consequence. Harcourt said in December 1762 ‘that Lord Nuneham did not open his mouth in the House’, and there is no record of his speaking afterwards.
He supported the Grenville Administration, but in the division of 18 Feb. 1764 on general warrants voted against them. The same day Harcourt wrote to the King:
I am under such perturbation of mind, and so completely unhappy on account of Lord Nuneham who (I find) has taken a part in the last question so contrary to your Majesty’s interest, so contrary to the wellbeing of this country, and so diametrically to my own principles, that I think myself called upon in duty and honour to declare my disapprobation of it.
Lord Nuneham has hitherto attended so little to affairs of Government that I fear he has allowed himself to be imposed upon by those who have but too well succeeded in making him and other unwary people the dupes of faction and the tools of ambition.
The King assured Harcourt that no blame should be laid to his account, and the incident passed over without doing father or son any harm. It does not appear that Nuneham ever repented his vote, but he took care not to offend again. After his marriage in September 1765 he went abroad, and did not return to England until the end of 1766. His only other recorded vote in the Commons was with Administration on the land tax, 27 Feb. 1767.
Horace Walpole wrote
The new Earl was a most honest man, and, being by principle averse to the measures of the court, had quitted the House of Commons because he would not support the measures and would not differ with his father.
‘I have neither spirits nor constitution’, wrote Nuneham to Harcourt, 10 June 1772,
Harcourt died 20 Apr. 1809.
