Born into one of Cumberland’s leading families, Hodgson was the only Conservative to sit for Carlisle between the 1832 Reform Act and the First World War. He was the grandson of William Hodgson of Houghton House, Cumberland, and the eldest son of Joseph Hodgson, a Carlisle solicitor.
At the 1847 general election Hodgson was brought forward at Carlisle by the Lowther interest, headed by the 2nd earl of Lonsdale. Standing on ‘protectionist and protestant principles’ and backed by a vast majority of the city’s freemen, he was returned in second place, but following a petition against his return, 6 Dec. 1847, he was found, by his agents, guilty of treating, and was unseated, 6 Mar. 1848.
An occasional attender who, in his own words, ‘rarely occupied the time of the House’, Hodgson followed Disraeli into the division lobby on most major issues, although he voted against Roman Catholic relief, 8 Dec. 1847, and the removal of Jewish disabilities, 17 Dec. 1847.
Following a difficult canvass, in which he rather unconvincingly insisted that he had been a long-time supporter of free trade, Hodgson was defeated at the 1852 general election.
Reflecting his commercial interests, Hodgson sat on the 1857-8 select committee on accidents on railways.
At the Carlisle by-election of November 1861, necessitated by Graham’s death, Hodgson attempted to regain his seat but, following a fractious contest, he was narrowly defeated by three votes.
Despite his earlier insistence that he would ‘give every liberty to dissenters not to pay towards the maintenance of the church’, Hodgson voted against church rate abolition, 7 Mar. 1866.
Contesting Carlisle for an eighth time, Hodgson was defeated in third place at the 1868 general election, but topped the poll at Cumberland East where, with the Conservative interest more stable, he held his seat until he died in harness at his London home in Duke Street, St. James’s, in April 1876. His effects were valued at under £16,000.
