align="left">Remembered as ‘a gentlemen, a scholar, and antiquarian’, John Hodgson, a ‘healthy-looking handsome man’ of middle height and with a ‘florid complexion’, was a direct descendant of William Hodgson, sheriff of Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1474.
After a bitter campaign in which his opposition to the ballot and his protectionist sympathies drew much criticism, Hodgson retained his seat at the 1832 general election. Although backing Grey’s administration over Irish legislation, he was not a consistent supporter of the ministry. A freeman of Newcastle, Hodgson spoke out in opposition to Lord John Russell’s bill to disenfranchise Liverpool freemen, 26 Feb. 1834, and his subsequent motion, 12 Mar. 1834, to instruct the select committee to retain the voting privileges of the freemen was defeated, 14-106.
Hodgson recaptured his seat at Newcastle at an 1836 by-election, triggered by the death of Sir Matthew White Ridley, and thereafter consistently opposed Melbourne’s second administration. Resuming his defence of freemen, he moved a clause, 15 Feb. 1837, to ensure hospitals for freemen were funded by corporations, which was defeated, and later criticised the ‘ministerial attempt to violate’ the Reform Act with its parliamentary electors bill.
Returned unopposed at the 1841 general election, Hodgson Hinde directed his energies towards railway legislation, frequently intervening in debate, and consistently opposing the attempts of the Peel ministry to ensure the state could exercise purchasing power over future railways. In March 1844, he stated that parliament ‘ought not to give away its jurisdiction’ to the select committee on railways, which ought to make available its evidence, and in July the same year, he made two unsuccessful attempts to delay the reading of the railways bill.
As a general supporter of Peel’s ministry, Hodgson Hinde divided with the premier over the reinstatement of income tax, 13 Apr. 1842, against the abolition of church rates, 16 June 1842, in opposition to Russell’s motion for a select committee to investigate the state of Ireland, 23 Feb. 1844, and in support of the extension of the Maynooth grant, 18 Apr. 1845. However, he maintained his support for protection and voted against the repeal of the corn laws, 12 Feb. 1846. Rejecting Peel’s argument that the repeal would help the Irish in their plight against famine, Hodgson Hinde attacked the government for not having ‘that wisdom which was so essential to statesmen … knowing when to let well alone’.
At the 1847 general election, Hodgson Hinde declined to defend his seat and retired from the Commons. It was later recalled that ‘he always preferred not to appear in the foreground, but would lend his able and cheerful assistance to the uttermost’.
