The son and namesake of the famous Staffordshire potter and inventor Josiah Wedgwood (1730-95), whom he succeeded as chief of the family’s manufacturing firm, Wedgwood briefly represented Stoke-on-Trent as a Reformer. While his father has been much studied as an industrial and scientific pioneer, Wedgwood has received no comparable attention. The Wedgwood family had been involved in the Staffordshire pottery trade since the late seventeenth century. Wedgwood’s father set up on his own account in 1766, establishing the Etruria factory soon after. He later developed a type of cream-coloured earthenware known as Queen’s Ware, and was a skilful marketer of his products.
On his father’s death in 1795, Wedgwood (known as Josiah II or Jos in the family) inherited Etruria Hall, the Etruria factory and the surrounding estate.
Wedgwood displayed a ruthless streak in cutting the company’s costs, but did little to encourage new techniques or designs.
In 1831 Wedgwood unsuccessfully contested Newcastle-under-Lyme as a Reformer, but he was returned for the new constituency of Stoke-on-Trent, which encompassed the Staffordshire Potteries, the following year. His daughter Emma wrote that ‘all of us were very much pleased at his coming in so grandly, especially as he is become too Tory for these Radical Times’.
In Parliament, Wedgwood was a silent but conscientious attender.
In his later years Wedgwood was increasingly afflicted by palsy or Parkinson’s disease, and he retired from the business in 1841 and died two years later.
