While still under age Ross, ‘a very handsome young man,’
Young Ross, son of a commissioner of customs, and saved from the dishonour of not liking to go to the West Indies, when it was his turn, by Sir Robert’s giving him a lieutenancy, voted against us.
To Mann, 16 Dec. 1741.
A month later, shortly before Walpole’s resignation, the 1st Lord Egmont heard
that Lord Ross had been sent for up from Scotland to influence his son, Mr. Charles Ross, but Mr. Ross had a very good estate independent of his father.
HMC Egmont Diary, iii. 243, 278.
In October 1742 he was included in the Cockpit list of ministerial supporters; but in the division of 10 Dec. 1742 on the Hanoverians he is shown among the opposition absentees, and on 6 Dec. 1743 he was one of the army officers who supported an opposition motion for disbanding the Hanoverians, telling
a story of a drunken quarrel between an English groom and a Hanoverian soldier on their march into winter quarters, after which the latter had been acquitted by his commanding officer before the party aggrieved had an opportunity of being heard, and producing his evidence.
Denying an imputation that his speech reflected on the King, he said that ‘the instance he gave happened after that great person left the army’. The instance, according to the 1st Lord Egmont, ‘appeared to the House very frivolous’.
