Constituency | Dates |
---|---|
Bossiney | 1741 – 11 Dec. 1741 |
Sec. to ld. lt. [I] 1745 – d. P.C. [I] 1745.
Liddell’s father, a commissioner of the navy and a friend of Pepys, bought Wakehurst for £9,000 in 1694.1G. W. E. Loder, Wakehurst Place, 69-71. Liddell himself gained notoriety in November 1729 when he was surprised in adultery with Lady Abergavenny by her husband, who was awarded £10,000 damages against him.2HMC Egmont Diary, i. 50; Pol. State, xxxix. 217-20. In order to avoid paying the damages, he appears to have made over his estates to his younger brother Charles.3Loder, 77-78, 125. In December 1733 Lord Ailesbury reported from Brussels:
Mr. Liddell here is a very pretty gentleman and well bred ... No doubt he has a good estate, as one may judge by appearance in going to all countries to divert himself, and as he told me Lord Abergavenny should never have a shilling of his money.4HMC 15th Rep. VII, 235.
Returned for Bossiney as an opposition Whig in 1741, he was unseated on petition by 7 votes, including that of another wronged husband, Sir William Morice, gained by his kinsman, Lord Abergavenny, ‘for what reason is obvious enough’.5Stuart mss 216/111; Coxe, Walpole, iii. 582. Re-seated on a further petition after Walpole’s fall, he voted against the Hanoverians in 1742 and 1744, signing the opposition whip of 10 Nov. 1743.6Owen, Pelhams, 198. Lord Chesterfield states that ‘everybody was much surprised’ when he appointed Liddell his secretary on becoming lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1745,
and some of my friends represented to me, that he was no man of business, but only a very genteel, pretty young fellow. I assured them, and with truth, that that was the very reason why I chose him,7Chesterfield Letters, 2090.
telling Liddell:
Sir, you will receive the emoluments of your place, but I will do the business myself, being determined to have no first minister.8M. Maty, Mems. of Chesterfield (1777 ed.), 151.
He died shortly afterwards, 22 June 1746.