Born at Chaud Fontaine, near Liege, Woulfe came from ‘an ancient Roman Catholic family’ which had settled in Limerick in the fifteenth century. Succeeding to ‘a good family estate’ at Tiermaclane, near Ennis, he became ‘a man of great private worth’ and was one of the first Catholics to be admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, where, in his own words, ‘he distinguished himself’ and thereafter took ‘a decided but temperate part in the distracted politics of Ireland’.
Although Woulfe ‘had anything but a natural relish for the technicalities of the law’, he nevertheless pursued a successful legal career, composing an (unpublished) treatise on English property law in 1822.
After 1829 Woulfe was said to have ‘virtually seceded from politics altogether’, and he declined the offer of seats at Louth and Carlow in December 1834. However, after appearing as O’Connell’s counsel in his election petition for the city of Dublin, he complied with his client request to come forward as the ministerial candidate for Cashel at a by-election in September 1835.
Woulfe was regarded as among ‘the very best of the [Irish reform] party’, being described by The Times as ‘an excessively shrewd and straightforward sort of person’.
Woulfe’s maiden speech, on the second reading of the Irish municipal reform bill, 7 Mar. 1836, established his reputation in Liberal circles as ‘an orator of the highest order, and a statesman of the most unquestionable sagacity’.
Woulfe was passed over for the positions of Irish law adviser and solicitor-general in 1835, being subject to ‘the turn-about system’ (according to which only one of the two Irish law officers could be a Catholic). The following year he was spoken of as a candidate for the bench, and was appointed Irish solicitor-general in November 1836, becoming attorney-general just three months later.
Woulfe served on select committees on the manor and the prerogative and ecclesiastical courts in Ireland in 1837, and, in February 1838 assisted with a bill to regulate the levying and expenditure of grand jury cess in the city and county of Dublin.
While an assistant barrister, Woulfe had earned praise for his ‘minute scrutiny’ of the county Galway registry in 1830, and, in 1835 he helped to establish the Irish Liberal Registration Committee (revived as the Reform Registry Association in November 1839), making a ‘bold and eloquent’ statement of its intentions at the Royal Exchange, Dublin, 16 Jan. 1836.
In June 1838, Woulfe assisted with a measure to define the boundaries of Ireland’s municipalities and divide them into wards, and prepared bills to reform the Dublin police and the Cork sessions, and to assimilate the powers of the Dublin grand jury with those of other Irish counties.
Woulfe was returned unopposed at by-elections for Cashel consequent upon his legal promotions in December 1836 and February 1837, and was re-elected at the 1837 general election. Although he was deemed to have been ‘more successful in parliament than other Irish law officers of that time’, he ultimately ‘failed in the House of Commons because his health failed him’.
As a judge, Woulfe was said to have held the view that ‘the poor Man’s Cow … ought to be protected as well as any other property’.
In July 1840 Woulfe succumbed to the effects of an operation and died at Baden Baden. Never having been ‘a worshipper of the brazen image of O’Connell’, he was valued by those sceptical of the Irish reformers as ‘incomparably the best of the crew’, and ‘a man of capacity who, but for delicacy of constitution, would have risen to eminence in his profession’.
