‘A very opulent porcelain manufacturer and merchant’, Copeland was dismissed by Benjamin Disraeli in 1842 as a ‘thick-headed Alderman’.
Copeland’s father William (1765-1826) had been apprenticed to the Stoke pottery manufacturer Josiah Spode (1755-1827), and from 1794 was the firm’s London merchant. On his father’s death in 1826, Copeland became joint partner with Spode’s son. After the deaths of his partner and his heir, Copeland bought out the Spode family’s assets in 1833, including purchasing the London business for £21,500, the Stoke factory for £44,000, half of Fenton Park colliery for £8,950 and 189 workers’ houses in Stoke for £11,000.
It was through his membership of the Irish Society, which managed the City Corporation’s Irish estates, that Copeland came to contest Coleraine in county Londonderry in 1831, being presented as a ‘Protestant reformer’ to stand against the Beresford interest.
At the 1835 general election, Copeland was re-elected for Coleraine. To his Irish supporters, he declared his ‘unalterable attachment to the great cause of Reform’ and his desire to ‘eradicate every abuse in Church and State’.
At the 1837 general election, Copeland removed from Coleraine to Stoke-on-Trent, and was elected as a Conservative. During the campaign, Copeland pointed to his votes in favour of abolition of slavery, national education, municipal reform in England and Ireland, and tithe commutation as evidence of his progressive credentials.
In the following Parliament, Copeland cast votes against the ballot, repeal of the corn laws, and Irish church appropriation. He denied that City opinion was favourable to the Whigs’ budget, 14 May 1841.
Copeland supported Peel’s revised sliding scale on corn and the reintroduction of income tax in 1842 and in the same year made a brief contribution to a debate on truck payment.
In 1849 Copeland opposed a smoke prohibition bill as unworkable and harmful to industry.
He was returned at the top of the poll at the 1857 general election, during which he advocated suffrage extension, revision of the poor laws, currency reform, law reform, differentiation of income tax and shrewdly tapped the popularity of Palmerston, whom he promised to give a ‘free and independent support’.
Aside from his extensive business interests, which undoubtedly limited his parliamentary activity, Copeland was heavily involved in City charities, owned a stud farm and amassed a collection of sporting paintings.
