Scott’s father, Whig Member for Worcester, 1802-6, was the largest landowner in Great Barr, where the family had settled in the reign of Edward I, and was created a baronet by the Grenville ministry, 30 Apr. 1806. Scott was tutored by the Rev. Thomas Harwood, presumably at Lichfield Grammar School, where he was headmaster, 1791-1813, before attending Westminster and Oxford. He succeeded his father in 1828 and by the 1840s had added industrial limeworks in the neighbouring township of Aldridge to the family’s estates.
Scott, who like his father was mostly a silent Member, voted for the second reading of the reintroduced reform bill, 6 July, and gave general support to its details, although he was in the minority for giving two Members to Stoke, 4 Aug. 1831. He presented a Lichfield petition for extending the residence requirement to ‘all persons claiming a right to be registered as voters for any city or borough, by reason of owning or occupying any freehold or tenement’, 13 July, and next day an individual’s petition for the disfranchisement of burgage tenants and the transfer of urban freehold and annuitant voters to the counties. He joined Brooks’s, 17 Aug., sponsored by Sir John Wrottesley* and Sir Ronald Ferguson*, but next day divided in favour of Lord Chandos’s amendment to enfranchise £50 tenants-at-will. He voted for the reform bill’s passage, 21 Sept., the second reading of the Scottish bill, 23 Sept., and Lord Ebrington’s confidence motion, 10 Oct. He divided with government on the Dublin election controversy, 23 Aug. He voted for the second reading of the revised reform bill, 17 Dec. 1831, and again gave steady support to its details. On 24 Jan. 1832 he presented and endorsed a petition from Lichfield praying that ‘the provision of the last reform bill, with respect to enforcing the residence of the voters, might be followed up’. He gave notice that day that he would move for the words ‘a knight or knights of the shire’ to be replaced by ‘any Member’ in clause 18, which set out occupational requirements for freeholders, but failed to do so. He divided for the bill’s third reading, 22 Mar. He voted against ministers on the Russian-Dutch loan, 26 Jan., but with them on the issue, 12, 16, 20 July (as a pair). He was in the minority for reduction of the Irish registrar of deeds’s salary, 9 Apr. He voted for the address calling on the king to appoint only ministers who would carry the reform bill unimpaired, 10 May, the second reading of the Irish bill, 25 May, and against a Conservative amendment to the Scottish bill, 1 June. He divided for a tax on Irish absentee landowners, 19 June, but against Hume’s proposal to disqualify the recorder of Dublin from sitting in Parliament, 24 July 1832.
Scott was returned for Lichfield at the 1832 general election and sat as a Whig until the dissolution of 1837, when he retired. He canvassed again in 1841, but declined ‘before the weight of the Anson influence’.
