Learning his Conservative politics from his father, William Collett’s main concern while serving as MP for Lincoln was the need for firm government and new railways in Ireland. His father Ebenezer Collett, who had represented but never visited the Irish pocket borough of Cashel (1819-30), having previously sat for Grampound, was silent in the Commons but could always be relied on to vote against Catholic emancipation and parliamentary reform.
Collett first offered for Parliament as a ‘thorough Conservative’ at Boston in 1837, but polled a distant fourth.
Collett managed to improve on his father’s contributions to parliamentary debate, but only intervened intermittently. He made his debut in 1845 with a question about the import duty on straw plat, 27 Feb. 1845. Collett only contributed ‘when thoroughly acquainted with the subject and able to substantiate his statements with undeniable facts’.
Collett’s parliamentary performance, however, did not endear him to those who elected him. He resisted attempts to force him to retire and went down to defeat in 1847, finishing bottom of the poll with only 278 votes.
In 1852 Collett joined the Australian gold rush as one of the directors of the Australian Mutual Gold Mining Association, emigrating there with his family and accompanied by 40 miners to work in the goldfields.
The New South Wales government had meanwhile effectively abolished the post of commissioner of roads in December 1861 by cutting the salary from £700 to 1s., partly from a desire for economy, but Collett’s conduct in the office was also a factor.
The ever enterprising Collett turned to a variety of new projects. He became a director of the Upper Hunter Quartz-Crushing Association, which sought to extract gold from quartz.
Collett took up residence in Caernafon, Wales, but renewed his parliamentary ambitions in county Tipperary, where he emphasised the defence of the Protestant church in Ireland as the key issue when seeking election in 1868.
