Harland was the eldest son of William Hoar, recorder of Durham and a bencher of Lincoln’s Inn.
At the 1832 general election Harland came forward as a Reformer for Durham City and declared himself friendly to ‘a reduction of taxation … the extinction of negro slavery, and an effective reform of all abuses in church and state’. Although he praised Grey’s ministry, he insisted that he ‘would act not as a follower of any minister, but as an independent representative of the people’.
At the 1835 and 1837 general elections, Harland successfully saw off a Radical challenge got up by the Lambton interest. Although one historian has suggested that the Radical opposition was prompted by Harland’s ‘conservatism’, his votes indicate little evidence for this.
Although Harland’s attendance in the House progressively waned after 1835, he maintained his support for religious liberties, and the majority of his periodic contributions to debate concerned ecclesiastical matters. He described the appropriation of Irish church revenues as ‘a measure which, so far from injuring the Protestant religion, would put it on a firm footing, not only in the affections and love of the people, but in their reason and judgement’, 17 June 1835, and he spoke against the ministry’s established church bill, arguing that no surplus revenue should be taken ‘from the diocese of Durham until the spiritual wants of the people of that diocese were fully provided for’, 8 July 1836 and 12 July 1836. His longest known speech, however, was on his motion to make railway companies liable for the expenses incurred in landowners proving the validity of title deeds, which came to nothing, 3 May 1836.
Harland voted steadily with ministers on most major issues during Melbourne’s second administration, but made an outspoken attack on the government’s plan to reduce sugar duties in 1841. Describing the proposal as ‘an attempt to make a permanent change in the protective system of the country in order to meet a temporary financial difficulty’, he argued that the measure ‘would injure the interests of the colonies, and seriously hurt the agricultural interest, without being of any benefit to the working classes’, 13 May 1841. His displeasure at the ministry was further evident when he abstained from the crucial vote on Peel’s motion of no confidence, 4 June 1841, by reportedly hiding in the Commons library.
Harland’s abstention from this crucial division, however, weakened his standing among his supporters in Durham, and he withdrew from the field on the eve of the 1841 general election. Thereafter he retired from public life to focus on the management of his estates.
