A country Whig who hailed from a Lancastrian clerical and legal family, Bolton King, as he was generally known, made little impression in his two stints in Parliament, which were separated by a gap of two decades, but was prominent in his adopted county of Warwickshire as a standard-bearer of Whiggery. On his father’s death in December 1824, Bolton King had succeeded to Carr Hill House, Kirkham, Lancashire, but disposed of the property in 1826 before purchasing Umberslade Hall in Warwickshire for £76,000.
In partnership with an independent, he ousted the Tory Sir Charles Greville, brother of the earl of Warwick and representative of the ‘Castle interest’ at Warwick, in the 1831 general election and was elected in second place the following year, behind Greville who was later unseated on petition. (A counter petition against Bolton King was dismissed, 15 May 1833.) In Parliament, Bolton King reluctantly went against many of his constituents’ wishes by supporting Irish coercion, believing the measure to be ‘indispensible’ for the preservation of life and property in Ireland, 1 Mar. 1833.
He continued to vote with the Whigs in the major divisions of the 1835 session and the following year supported the ministry’s reforms of the established church and municipal corporations in Ireland. He was also one of the leaders of the local Reformers’ unsuccessful challenge at the South Warwickshire by-election, 1 July 1836.
In the subsequent decade Bolton King settled at his estate at Chadshunt, which he had acquired through his first marriage, and sold off Umberslade to the family of George Frederick Muntz, MP for Birmingham 1840-57, its tenant since 1850.
On his death twenty years later, Bolton King’s eldest son from his first marriage, Edward Raleigh King (1833-1900), succeeded to Chadshunt.
