A Conservative squire, Wise continued the tradition of undistinguished and silent parliamentary service which was the hallmark of South Warwickshire’s representatives between the first two Reform Acts.
It was later claimed, prior to Wise’s election, that he had often been solicited to stand for South Warwickshire in the past but that it had never suited his purposes to do so, and there were reasons for his reluctance to come forward.
After topping the poll, Wise took his place on the Conservative benches.
Wise retired at the 1874 general election and died in 1883. As his heir and namesake, an army officer, had been killed in a skirmish in Australia in 1854, Wise was succeeded by his second son George (1830-88), who was predeceased by his remaining brothers and died childless, after which the estates passed to his cousin Sir George Waller, an army officer.
