A distinguished soldier, who had served under Marlborough, Webb came of a Wiltshire family, with a strong interest at Ludgershall, where he was returned as a Tory to twelve successive Parliaments, including that of 1713, when he chose to sit for Newport in the Isle of Wight, of which he had been appointed governor by the Tory Government in 1710. After George I’s accession, attempts were made to secure his dismissal as a Tory from his military posts, but the King re-appointed him to them on condition that he made his peace with Marlborough,
that if he had 6,000 regular troops, he would undertake to beat all the forces which could on a sudden be brought together in England ... He desired timely notice when and where the descent will be made, that he might draw his money out of the funds and bring a good purse with him to the field.
In January 1717 the Pretender sent him a letter of thanks for his devotion to the cause; and in the spring of 1717 he was said to ‘wait but a call anywhere’.
Webb’s only recorded speech after George I’s accession was made in November 1718, in support of a motion for translating the text of treaties from Latin into English. He
said he was not ashamed to own his ignorance; that he was never brought up in a university but in the army ever since he was 16 and had never looked in a grammar since, and that he did not understand one word that was read, and therefore insisted that they should be turned into English and not forced to vote for what they did not know.
HMC Stuart, vii. 568.
His only recorded vote was against the peerage bill in 1719. At the general election of 1722 he was again opposed by his brother, who petitioned, renewing his petition till Webb’s death 5 Sept. 1724.
