Career
Pugh was Captain in the Montgomeryshire Volunteer Cavalry from 10 December 1819 to 1828, when the regiment was disbanded. On the embodiment of the Montgomeryshire Yeomanry Cavalry in 1831, he was appointed Major. He resigned in 1844. He was Recorder of Welshpool.
He was High Sheriff of Montgomeryshire in 1823, and Deputy Lieutenant of Montgomeryshire.
He was elected Member of Parliament for the Montgomery Boroughs in 1832, but unseated on petition the next year. In 1852, 1857, and 1859 Mr.
Pugh was again successively returned. His death in 1861 triggered a by-election.
He was often described as David Pugh of Llanerchydol, to distinguish him from others of the same name.
The 2000 acre estate of Llanerchydol Hall, Welshpool, Powys was the home of the Pugh family from 1776 until 1912 when the estate was split up and sold. His father built the house in 1776 on the site of an original house which is thought to have been destroyed by fire. In 1820 David Pugh rebuilt the house in the Gothic Revival style introducing the romantic turrets and castellations.
Later, in 1848 the architect Thomas Penson was consulted on the drawing room.
The family also placed great importance on landscaping the surrounding parkland by employing John Adey Repton. The gardens, including a Japanese water garden and parterre, were introduced along with bold planting of trees in a grand style.
He donated a site in Newtown, Powys for the building of Street David"s Church. 1. David Pugh, born 24 April 1815, and died 15 September 1857, unmarried.
2. Sometime a captain in the 90th Light Infantry, and a Deputy-Lieutenant for the co, of Montgomery.
Unsuccessfully contested the Montgomery Boroughs in 1863. 3. Margaret Ann Pugh, married, in September 1856, to John Samuel Willes Johnson, Captain Registered Nurse, of Hannington Hall.
Wiltshire.
Elected Member of Parliament for Montgomery Boroughs on the death of his father-in-law, Doctorate. Pugh, in 1861. Died 1881. 4. Mary Jane Pugh, Died 1869. 5. John Cadwalader Pugh, born in 1826.
Lieutenant in the Ist, or Royal Regiment.
He died on his passage home from Canada with his regiment, 19 July 1851, aged 25 (Memorial in Welshpool church), unmarried. His descendent, Captain Peter Audley David Arthur Lovell, also became High Sheriff for Montgomeryshire in 1900.