Owen came from a very old Welsh family. His grandfather, David Owen (1700-77) of Cefnhafodan and Llangurig, Montgomeryshire, had four surviving sons. The eldest, Owen Owen (1723-89), was sheriff of the county in 1766 and founded the Glansevern branch of the family. The third son Edward Owen (?1728-1807) was educated at Oxford (where on his matriculation his father was described as ‘pleb.’), became rector of Warrington, Lancashire and master of the local grammar school and published, among other works, verse translations of Juvenal and Persius.
Edward Owen was already under the professional care of Rich, and was borne on the books of various ships from 1775 until his actual entry to the navy in 1786. After coming of age he made over his interest in Campobello to his younger brother, who followed him into the service under Rich’s aegis. William Fitzwilliam Owen achieved distinction as a naval surveyor and founded the West African island colony of Fernando Po in 1827. He became sole proprietor of Campobello in 1835, developed quirky religious views, expounded in his Quoddy Hermit (1841), and died at St. John, New Brunswick in 1857.
Owen was reported to have broken his collar bone in a fall from his gig, 15 Apr. 1826.
Owen, who remained at the ordnance in the administrations of Lord Goderich and the duke of Wellington, presented more petitions for repeal of the Test Acts, 21 Feb., but voted against that measure, 26 Feb. 1828. He presented a Sandwich maltsters’ petition for repeal of the Malt Act, 25 Feb. Soon afterwards Clarence, lord high admiral since May 1827, secured Owen’s appointment as a member of his four-man council (that is, as a lord of the admiralty). There was no problem with his re-election, despite a technical ‘blot’, as Croker noted, whereby it might have seemed to precede his appointment.
Wellington ignored Clarence’s request that Owen be made a privy councillor, 11 July 1828, when he also demanded the dismissal of Sir George Cockburn* from his council for writing a letter of remonstrance against his assumption of an unauthorized military command. In the ensuing wrangle, which ended in Clarence’s resignation, Owen was used by him as an intermediary and messenger. He was the only one of the council who would not have resigned had Cockburn been removed: he ‘admitted that the duke was in the wrong’, but thought that Cockburn should have voiced rather than written his protest. At the same time, he conceded that ‘in general, affairs at the admiralty were not conducted as the law and the patent ... required they should be’; and he claimed that he had been about to say as much to Clarence when the argument broke out.
He remained there for three years and returned in time to stand for Sandwich at the 1832 general election. Although the reformed constituency included Deal, he was heavily defeated by the Liberal sitting Members.
