Described by a contemporary as being ‘tall and very thin, with prominent features, and bushy hair’, William Hutt, whose parliamentary career lasted over forty years, was an expert on colonial and commercial questions who served as vice-president of the board of trade in Palmerston’s second administration.
Hutt offered in the Liberal interest for the notoriously venal borough of Kingston-upon-Hull at the 1832 general election, after being invited by the local Radical James Acland, and was returned in second place. Re-elected in 1835, he was defeated by William Wilberforce at the 1837 general election, but seated on petition, 7 May 1838, after the former was unable to prove his qualification.
A prolific speaker in the Commons, Hutt regularly addressed shipping issues affecting the port of Hull, but, unlike the majority of MPs from maritime constituencies, he did not blame the reciprocity dues for the difficulties faced by British shipping.
In March 1839 Hutt, whose Gibside home was nine miles south of Gateshead, accepted a formal requisition from 360 of the borough’s electors to become their next Liberal candidate, and was returned without opposition at the 1841 general election.
An opponent of the British policy of suppressing the slave trade through the use of naval force, Hutt successfully moved for a select committee ‘to consider the best means which Great Britain can adopt for providing the final extinction of the slave trade’, 22 Feb. 1848, and chaired the subsequent inquiries.
Although Hutt spoke less in the House in the 1850s, his addresses to Gateshead electors, particularly on foreign affairs, were notable. For example, initially supportive of the efforts of the Aberdeen ministry to delay war with Russia, he later ‘condemned in unmeasured terms the imbecility and incompetency of that government when once the war was entered upon’, and subsequently backed the new premier Palmerston for his ‘energy and wisdom on taking the reins of power’.
Hutt’s advocacy of commercial questions was rewarded in February 1860 when Palmerston appointed him vice-president of the board of trade and paymaster-general.
At the 1868 general election, Hutt comfortably defeated his Conservative opponent. He continued to be an active parliamentarian, with his public parks, schools and museums bill, which enabled a person to bequeath land for such purposes, becoming law in 1871, and retired at the dissolution in 1874. He returned to the family estate at Appley Towers, Ryde, Isle of Wight, where he died in November 1882. Although Hutt was twice married, he left no children, and his landed property was inherited by his brother, Sir George Hutt (1809-1889), a distinguished army officer.
Although his obituarist wrote that he was always ‘too much of a Whig for the advanced Liberals’,
Hutt’s correspondence with major political figures such as William Gladstone and Sir Robert Peel is located in the British Library, London. His extensive correspondence with William Henry Brockett, the influential leader of the Gateshead town council, is located at the Gateshead local studies library.
