Holland was born in Trieste, then under French occupation, where his father represented the trading firm of Holland and Humble.
In the pursuit of wealth, the family was not ‘overburdened by its dissenting conscience’, and Holland took his degree at Trinity College, Cambridge.
In 1832 Holland had married the daughter of Elias Isaac, a successful Worcester banker.
The mainstay of several agricultural societies, and the architect of a ‘carefully considered’ scheme of local tenant-right, Holland actively promoted agricultural education. He believed in the necessary ‘union of capital with skill’ in farming, and advocated the judicious introduction of machinery.
Holland was spoken of as a candidate for one of the divisions of Worcestershire in 1846, but did not re-enter politics until January 1854 when, presenting himself as ‘a Church and State man’ and an independent supporter of the Aberdeen ministry, he was easily beaten by Sir Michael Hicks Beach at Gloucestershire East.
A ‘frank and genial’ presence in the House, Holland believed that the reformed Commons had suffered ‘a growing evil’, whereby as the country’s business grew, so ‘the speeches of the members had increased in length, in verbosity, and in paucity of intelligence’, and therefore warned his constituents not to expect long speeches from him.
Having lost his first wife in 1851, he married his sister-in-law, the daughter of a Malta and city of London banker in Valletta in 1857.
In 1861 Holland appended his name to a Liberal address to Lord Palmerston on the subject of retrenchment, and in 1863 sat on the select committee on the Thames Embankment bill, but his principal concern in parliament was agriculture.
At his final election in 1865, he again qualified his support for the ballot by arguing that ‘the vote of a man was public property and ought to be exercised in public’, but spoke in favour of extending the franchise on the ground that the ‘working man ought to have a vote if he was in a position by intelligence and education’. He therefore supported the Liberal reform bill in 1866,
A ‘martyr to gout’, Holland died of congestion of the lungs at his residence in January 1875. He was remembered as ‘strong and resolute in his actions’, yet ‘quiet and gentle in manner with a great kindness of heart and a strong vein of humour’.
