Trench, a verbose and egregious Irishman, whose father held his property in Queen’s County as a tenant of the Earls Stanhope, was the ‘great confidant and friend’ of the 5th duke of Rutland.
so completely imbued with the subject and so sincerely anxious about it that I shall not require any preparation and had much rather avail myself of it to try my own bottom than make any attempt at a regular speech. Regular speeches are always long, smell of the lawyer and are not tolerated except from Canning or some great gun. But a ready and evidently unprepared attack in reply is much more useful to the speaker and more agreeable to the hearer. I wish I had something to defend.
Add 53816, f. 24.
He expressed disappointment that ministers were not prepared to propose ‘such a commutation of [Irish] tithes as would sustain the just rights of the church, and effect the general tranquillity of the country’, 15 May; but he divided with them against Newport’s call for a comprehensive commutation, 19 June. He presented Irish petitions for protection against imported butter, 20 May.
On the eve of the 1823 session Arbuthnot, the patronage secretary, mentioned Trench to Huskisson, president of the board of trade, as one of a number of possible movers and seconders of the address: ‘when I was at Belvoir a little while ago the duke of Rutland begged me to bring him forward. He is not very presentable, but faute de mieux he might do’.
He voted with government against the production of papers on Catholic office-holders, 19 Feb., and reform of Edinburgh’s representation, 26 Feb. 1824. He paired for the aliens bill, 2 Apr.
Trench rated himself highly as an urban improver and designer of fine buildings, and had hatched a grandiose scheme for the embankment of the Thames from Charing Cross to Blackfriars. He had the support not only of Rutland and his wife, but of the king’s brother, the duke of York, who took the chair at an inaugural meeting on the lord mayor’s barge, 17 July 1824, when Trench explained his scheme, which he also set out in a published Prospectus, to an audience of the great and the good. He estimated that it would cost less than £500,000 and would yield a return of five per cent. A committee of management was formed and a subscription opened.
I have now little doubt of its success, and even if it had failed I flatter myself the part I have taken and the luck I have had in overcoming difficulties would have been eminently useful to me as a public man.
George Agar Ellis* conceded that the project ‘seems [to be] getting on in public opinion’, but doubted ‘the possibility of its execution’. By January 1825, when he was hobnobbing with Wellington, York and Lords Anglesey and Hertford at Belvoir, Trench believed it would be ‘carried into effect not exactly as quickly as I could wish and as my project would effect it, but as effectually, and at all events it will be done honestly and impartially and skilfully’.
Mrs. Arbuthnot had cause to notice Trench again before the year was out for, describing a visit with her husband, now commissioner of woods and forests, to Wellington’s home at Stratfield Saye in October, she wrote:
We had Col. Trench to show us some plans he has for new buildings. He wants to have a palace in ... [Hyde] Park on ... [Bugden Hill], and the execution of his plan would cause half Hyde Park to be occupied by building, courts and gardens. It is the worst plan of a house I ever saw, and quite colossal, for he proposes a statue gallery 500 feet long, a drawing room 190, and other rooms in proportion. It is the most ridiculous plan I ever saw for, added to it, is the idea of a street 200 feet wide extending from the end of Hyde Park opposite the new palace to St. Paul’s!! The king and the duke of York are madly eager for this plan; but the former says he supposes his d____d ministers won’t allow it. Mr. Arbuthnot was very angry with Col. Trench, for he said it was too bad anybody should go and get the king’s ear and set him against everything that is being done for him. Col. Trench has persuaded him that Buckingham House will always be a damp hole unfit for him to live in; and the ministers, in consequence of the king’s determination to have no other palace, during the last session obtained money from Parliament, obtained the king’s approval of the plan and immediately set to work to build there for him.
Arbuthnot, who referred slightingly to Trench in front of the others as ‘a gentleman who fancies himself a man of taste’, told him that he had informed Liverpool of his disruptive interference. In a bid to clear his name ‘from an imputation of thrusting myself forward’, Trench immediately sent the premier a long, tedious, self-exculpatory letter, explaining how he had come to lay the project before the king. He enclosed with it the plans, but Liverpool returned them unseen. This rebuke did not prevent Trench from publicizing his scheme for an alternative palace in the press at the end of the year.
On the Irish Catholic petition for an education grant, 14 Apr. 1826, he denounced the idea as ‘injudicious’ and advocated the creation of ‘a sort of neutral ground, in which both Catholics and Protestants might meet in harmony’. He saw little merit in the proposal temporarily to open the ports to foreign corn, 5 May, but did not oppose it, though he suggested that Ireland might become a reliable source of grain if its people could be taught ‘habits of industry’. He did not think much of his leading constituents (he referred in private to ‘our blessed Cambridge corporation’), who had pestered him in 1825 on the subject of the university police bill, and into whose factional squabbles he was always liable to be dragged. He had been making himself known at Scarborough, where Rutland controlled one seat, currently occupied by Speaker Manners Sutton: ‘I think much of my future political comfort and ease will depend on my success there, and I have a substitute ready for Cam[bridge]’, he told his father.
In January 1827 Rutland, writing to congratulate Wellington on his appointment as commander-in-chief, strongly recommended Trench, who was ‘filled with ambition to be put forward in public life’, for employment: ‘with his disposition to business, and his indefatigable attention to whatever concern may be entrusted to him, I think you are acquainted’.
He voted against repeal of the Test Acts, 26 Feb. 1828. He repeated his view that agricultural improvement, the creation of a market for articles of ‘comfort’, and an end to the ‘infinite subdivision of land’, rather than emigration or the introduction of poor laws, would bring prosperity to Ireland, 31 Mar., 1 Apr. He voted against Catholic relief, 12 May, and with Wellington’s government on the ordnance estimates, 4 July. Rejecting criticism of Gordon’s plan to remove Smithfield livestock market from the City, 12 June (he had, of course, drawn up a scheme of his own at his own expense), he said that he would be ‘glad to see Millbank penitentiary converted into a giant abattoir’. The following day he brandished figures to prove his assertion that, thanks largely to the late duke of York, the cost of ‘the bravest and most economical army in the world’ was relatively less than in 1792. On 24 June 1828 he called for action to relieve the shipping industry from distress, and accused Huskisson of disregarding the complaints of the ship owners of Scarborough in a speech delivered 14 months ago; Huskisson gave him short shrift. Later that day he opposed Wilmot Horton’s Irish emigration scheme and again peddled his own nostrum of agricultural improvement, through which Ireland would ‘become the Sicily of this part of the world; and, instead of having two millions of half-naked wretches, we should have so many comfortable, happy peasantry, contributing to the support of the manufactures of England.’
He presented a petition for the abolition of slavery, 30 June 1828. A month later Rutland told Wellington that Trench, to whom he gave the original credit for the suggestion that Wellington’s son Lord Douro* might enter the Commons on Rutland’s interest, feared that he had ‘displeased’ the duke by urging on him his ‘wishes for civil employment’. Trench was relieved to be assured by Wellington in November that he had caused no offence; but the premier informed Rutland, who had hinted that Trench might be made surveyor-general of the ordnance, that it was ‘impossible at present’ to find a niche for him.
Trench writes me today in the following terms: ‘I have had letters from Ireland today and I confess that every moment increases my doubts of resisting what cannot fail (if resistance be successful) to throw us into the power of the ultra Whigs, and of absolute unconditional surrender without the shadow of a security’.
Wellington Despatches, v. 489-94; Wellington mss WP1/995/3; Arbuthnot Corresp. 119.
Two days later Trench presented a petition from Cheveley, where Rutland’s Cambridgeshire house was sited, against emancipation, but stressed that it acknowledged the ‘wisdom’ of ministers’ recommendation that the question be settled. Having resolved to support emancipation, combined as it was with adequate securities, he voted for the second reading of the relief bill, 18 Mar.; and the next day he wrote at length to one of Rutland’s leading supporters at Cambridge, where there was considerable anger at his change of mind, explaining and justifying it on the grounds that
our case is almost that of children contemplating amputation to save the life of a beloved parent, a choice between partial and total revolution ... We cannot sink Ireland into the ocean; and we must either conciliate or coerce.
Wellington mss WP1/1069/33.
On the Irish franchise bill, 26 Mar., he opposed Moore’s amendment to extend its operation to the boroughs, and welcomed it as ‘a great national security to Protestant interests, and to the Protestant church’. He spoke and voted in the minority for Moore’s subsequent attempt to raise the voting qualification to £20. He again explained his conduct in a speech delivered for Rutland’s benefit, 27 Mar., and voted for the third reading of the relief bill, 30 Mar., though he made an unsuccessful bid to add a clause making it a misdemeanour for any Christian minister to prohibit reading of the Scriptures. Lord Londonderry encouraged Rutland, 1 Apr., to turn Trench out; but the duke, who compromised on emancipation by voting for the second reading of the relief bill and sending a proxy vote against the third, and made it clear that his basic confidence in the ministry was undiminished, evidently had no fault to find with him.
Trench was in the ministerial minority on the civil list, 15 Nov. 1830, and went out of office on the change of administration. He presented Irish petitions against any further grant to the Kildare Place Society, 13 Dec. 1830. Opposition loosened his tongue. On 15 Feb. 1831 he got leave to introduce a bill, which he presented the next day, to amend the Acts governing Irish elections: it sought to give the vote to the owner of two or more freeholds with a combined value of £10 and to oblige candidates to warn every would-be voter against voting unless properly qualified. Trench, who supported the prayer of another Scarborough ship owners’ petition for protection against foreign competition, 1 Mar., was one of the opposition understrappers who seemed to Lord Ellenborough to be made ‘low’ when the scope of the Grey ministry’s reform bill was revealed.
In the House, 5 July 1831, Trench declared that the consequences of passing the reintroduced reform bill would be
the invasion of public property, and, at no very distant period, the ruin of the public creditor. I ... think this measure rash, improvident, ill-considered, ineffective for its own professed object, and revolutionary in its tendency.
Replying to opposition descriptions of Cambridge as a rotten borough, he said that Rutland’s influence was ‘legitimate and honourable and unpurchasable’, and that ‘the realm of England does not possess any body of constituents more pure, more upright, and more independent’. He paired against the second reading of the bill next day, but voted to the bitter end for the adjournment, 12 July. He was in the opposition minorities on the 1831 census, 19 July, the partial disfranchisement of Chippenham, 27 July, and the voting rights of non-resident freeholders in sluiced boroughs, 2 Sept., and voted against the third reading and passage of the bill, 19, 21 Sept. He voted for legal provision for the Irish poor, 29 Aug., but insisted that there was ‘a combination to resist the payment of tithes’ in Ireland, 6 Oct. He thought the Deacles’ allegations against William Bingham Baring* had their origin in ‘a conspiracy’, 27 Sept. On 11 Oct. he praised the police for their handling of the crowd converging on Parliament the previous night, and the following day had an angry exchange with Hume, which required the Speaker’s intervention, over his supposed failure to prevent the attack on Wellington’s house: ‘the time, perhaps, is not very far distant, when a Jacobin club may overawe the proceedings of this House’. The defeat of the reform bill in the Lords and the Tory victory in the Dorset by-election encouraged Trench to predict a national reaction against reform, 17, 20 Oct. 1831.
He rode his royal palace hobby horse (in which he failed to interest Wellington)
Trench voted against the second reading of the revised reform bill, 17 Dec. 1831, and was in the opposition minorities against going into committee, 20 Jan., the enfranchisement of Tower Hamlets, 28 Feb., and the third reading, 22 Mar. 1832. He voted against government on the Russian-Dutch loan, 26 Jan., 12 July, and condemned their interference in the Portuguese civil war, 26 Mar. He endorsed the popular view that the general register bill was a ‘job’, 8 Feb.; complained of potentially dangerous economies in the Holyhead packet service, 13 Feb.; said that proposals for army reductions, which had been taken to their limit by the Wellington ministry, went too far, 17 Feb., and argued that Warburton’s anatomy bill would encourage rather than curb burking, 27 Feb. He was knighted that month. His motion to revive the select committee on the Commons buildings, 14 Feb., when he blamed Hume for the deadlocked fiasco of the last one, was coldly received, and he dropped it. He again attacked the expense of Buckingham House, 29 Feb., failed in his bid to obtain papers after once more rehearsing his own alternative scheme, 27 Mar., and on 13 Apr. defiantly predicted that the building would ‘never be occupied by the monarch’. He joined in the attack on Plunket, now Irish chancellor, for nepotism, 6 Mar., said he would be glad to see the Irish Catholic priests paid by the state if they would forsake their ‘narrow system’ of seminary education, 11 Apr., and asserted that the clergy were entitled to tithes as long as most Irish property belonged to Protestants, 13 Apr. He paired against the second reading of the Irish reform bill, 25 May. On 31 May he attributed the disturbances in the hitherto peaceful Queen’s County, where his relatives were at the mercy of ‘self-elected lawgivers’, to a deliberate ‘reign of terror’, which he called on government to crush. Although he approved the Irish party processions bill, 29 June, he belatedly attacked ministers for sanctioning, as almost their first act on coming into office in 1830, the trades’ procession to address the king. He criticized the mooted extension to the Commons library as ‘plain and ugly’, 25 July, when he also expressed his belief that Lord Brougham’s appointment of his brother to a chancery sinecure had been intended to be permanent; he defended Sugden’s part in exposing this job the next day. He sought to justify police intervention against a meeting at Blarney and protested at the removal of the naval base from Cove, 2 Aug. The following day, when he voted against the crown colonies relief scheme, he stated that a major objection to single women being allowed to serve as jurors was the fact that juries were often ‘locked up all night together in a room’. He also accused ministers of having encouraged the agitation against Irish tithes which they were now trying to disown and suppress. He thought that army officers with ten years’ service who took holy orders should remain entitled to their half-pay, 8 Aug. 1832.
The Reform Act freed Cambridge from Rutland’s control. At the 1832 general election Trench contested Scarborough on the duke’s interest, but was beaten by two Liberals. He fought successful contests there at the next three elections and retired in 1847. Peel employed him in both his ministries, though whether on his own merits or as a sop to Rutland is not clear.
