Henry Bromley, 1st Baron Montfort, of Horseheath Hall, Cambridgeshire, was a British landowner and Whig politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1727 until 1741 when he was raised to the peerage as Baron Montfort. He was a cricketer but also a gambler who killed himself in the face of financial ruin.
At the 1727 Bromley was elected in a contest as Whig Member of Parliament for Cambridgeshire with Samuel Shepheard, but was defeated at Cambridge where he also stood. He was Lord-Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire between 1729 and 1742 and became the chief Whig election manager in Cambridgeshire. His first reported speech, said to be ‘well worded’ and ‘studied’ was made on 27 February 1730 in the Dunkirk debate, when he was put up by Walpole to sidetrack an opposition motion. In 1731, he was one of the Members ordered by the House to draw up a bill for encouraging the sugar colonies, presumably because of his West Indian interests, and this was the basis of the 1733 Molasses Act. He spoke on the Address in 1732 and moved the address on the Princess Royal's marriage in 1733 with another ‘studied’ speech. At the 1734 British general election, he was returned unopposed. He moved the Address in 1740, and in 1741 warmly opposed the proposal that Walpole should leave the House while the motion for his dismissal was being debated. He was considered a ‘useful speaker for the Court’. After he was raised to the House of Lords he carried on managing the Cambridgeshire elections, and is said to have spent £100,000 out of his own pocket in supporting the government interest in the county and the Cambridge corporation. In May 1741 he was raised to the peerage as Lord Montfort, Baron of Horseheath, in the County of Cambridge.
Cricket
Montfort was active in cricket, both as a player and as a patron. In the 1743 season, he was the patron and captain of a London, Middlesex & Surrey XI for match against a Kent XI led by Lord John Sackville at Bromley Common on Thursday, 16 May. The stakes were £500 a side. Montfort's team scored 97 and Kent replied with 69. In their second innings, Montfort's team had reached 112–4 by eight o'clock when the patrons agreed to "leave off and play it out the next day". In fact, play did not restart on the Friday because Sackville conceded defeat. There are no other cricketing references to Montfort.
Later life, death and legacy
Through his mother Lord Montfort inherited the manor of Great Malvern in Malvern, Worcestershire, from his ancestor Sir Thomas Bromley and sold it, in about 1740, to Lord Foley. He spent extravagantly on Horseheath. His gambling, in which he was supposed to be ‘the sharpest genius of his time’, also consumed vast sums of money. He was seriously short of funds by the end of 1754, and applied to Newcastle for some employment. When Newcastle was unable to provide anything it was said he was very reasonable but seemed dejected. On the following morning, 1 January 1755, he wrote his will, and asked his lawyer if it would hold good even if he shot himself. After being told that it would, he went into the next room and blew his brains out. He left debts of £30,000, with an estate out of repair and in a very ruinous condition. He was succeeded in the barony by his only son, Thomas. His daughter, the Honourable Frances, married Charles Cadogan, 1st Earl Cadogan.