| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Richmond | 26 May 1769 – 1774 |
Lord Tavistock wrote to his father, 5 Nov. 1762, recommending Crowle to the Duke’s protection ‘during his stay at Paris’:1Bedford mss 46, f. 96. ‘I knew him at school and he was afterwards very civil to me in Italy, he is not very wise but an inoffensive good humoured lad.’
Crowle was returned for Richmond in 1769 on the interest of Sir Lawrence Dundas, in place of Alexander Wedderburn who had vacated his seat because of his vote on the Middlesex election. ‘You will have heard that Richmond was offered to Raby Vane’, wrote Sir James Lowther to Charles Jenkinson, 28 May 1769,2Add. 38206, f. 121. ‘and he not taking it, then to Crowle, a great friend of young Dundas’s.’
Crowle appears in no division list for this Parliament, but presumably as Dundas’s Member he voted with Administration, and in Robinson’s survey on the royal marriage bill, March 1772, is classed as ‘pro, present’. His only recorded speech was on the Selby canal bill, 2 Apr. 1773.3Cavendish’s ‘Debates’, Egerton 245, ff. 194-5. He did not stand in 1774.
Crowle died 7 Mar. 1811, aged 73.
