| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Fowey | 13 Feb. 1786 – 1790 |
| Fowey | 7 Mar. 1791 – 1796 |
Ld. lt. and v.-adm. Cornw. 1795 – d. capt. of gent. pens. Mar. 1808–12; PC 9 Mar. 1808.
Viscount Valletort, described by Fanny Burney in 1789 as ‘a most neat little beau’,1Diary of Madame d’Arblay ed. Dobson, v. 59. was involved in a double return for the family borough of Fowey in 1790. He came in instead for the other family borough of Lostwithiel, until in March 1791 his election at Fowey was confirmed; he then resumed that seat. He supported Pitt’s administration until he succeeded to the title. In January 1790 he had moved the address, but no further intervention in debate is known. He was listed hostile to the repeal of the Test Act in Scotland in April 1791. Sir John Morshead heard a report in October 1791 that he was ‘soon to have a place under government that would vacate his seat’,2Prince of Wales Corresp. ii. 631. but it was not so. He applied to Pitt on 5 June 1804 to succeed Lord Aylesford as Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard,3PRO 30/8/161, f. 267. but had to wait until the Portland administration appointed him. He was courted by successive governments for his borough interest.
He was a well-known amateur of the Italian Opera in England, on which he wrote Reminiscences,4Musical Reminiscences of an old Amateur: chiefly respecting the Italian Opera in England (1823, 4th edn. 1834). though an unfriendly journalist called him ‘a mere fribble, exhibiting little above the calibre of an opera connoisseur, with something of the mimic’.5Redding, Fifty Years’ Recollections, 2nd ed. (1858), i. 175. He was an enthusiast for amateur theatricals and his prologue for a performance at Strawberry Hill in 1800 is in the British Library; the score of his opera Zenobia (1801) does not survive. His wife was known as one of ‘Pharaoh’s daughters’ from her keeping a faro table. He died 26 Sept. 1839.6Gent. Mag. (1839), ii. 540; DNB.
- 1. Diary of Madame d’Arblay ed. Dobson, v. 59.
- 2. Prince of Wales Corresp. ii. 631.
- 3. PRO 30/8/161, f. 267.
- 4. Musical Reminiscences of an old Amateur: chiefly respecting the Italian Opera in England (1823, 4th edn. 1834).
- 5. Redding, Fifty Years’ Recollections, 2nd ed. (1858), i. 175.
- 6. Gent. Mag. (1839), ii. 540; DNB.
