Clement Taylor, like his father, three of his brothers, and the Quelchs, was a paper-maker with mills near Maidstone, in business on a large scale, enterprising and prosperous. He also owned some land in Kent. Contemporary correspondence suggests that he was of an independent turn of mind; and at Maidstone he was the candidate of the independent party, returned both in 1780 and 1784 after a contest.
He voted regularly against North’s Administration, and his only reported speech, 20 Feb. 1782, was on the censure motion against the Admiralty:
He went bankrupt in 1797, and died in Ireland in April 1804.