| Constituency | Dates |
|---|---|
| Warwickshire | 1710 – 28 Dec. 1711 |
Compton came back to England in July 1709 from a grand tour in which among other things he had developed a dislike of the Dutch for their ‘natural inclination . . . of requiring money in every place’. The following year his father, as lord lieutenant of Warwickshire, successfully persuaded the gentlemen of that county to select Compton as knight of the shire. He was classed as a Tory in the ‘Hanover list’, and was included among the ‘worthy patriots’ who in the first session exposed the mismanagements of the previous ministry. A teller on 3 Feb. 1711 in a division on the Honiton election, he also managed through the House the bill to prevent abuses in textile and iron manufacture. He was a member of the October Club, acting as ‘steward’ at one of its feasts in April 1711 which Swift was invited to join, but was not listed by Boyer, presumably because he had left the club by February 1712, having been called to the Upper House as one of Harley’s ‘dozen’ to secure the ministry’s majority there. Compton died on 3 Oct. 1754.2 Add. 38507, ff. 9, 17; Swift Stella, i. 241–2; Huntington Lib. Q. xxxiii. 157.
