One of a declining cohort of Waterloo veterans to seek a place in the Commons, Weyland’s unsuccessful attempts to enter the unreformed House included contesting Weymouth in 1828 as ‘a steady and inflexible supporter’ of church and state, who would ‘decidedly oppose any innovation which may be brought forward for innovation’s sake’.
At the 1832 general election Weyland offered again for Oxfordshire, citing his support for economy and retrenchment, his willingness to ‘oppose all unmerited pensions and useless sinecures’ and aversion to repeal of the corn laws, which would bring ‘irretrievable ruin to the landowner’. Refusing to make any other pledges, beyond an intention to ‘avoid extreme opinions’, he declared, ‘I will be a representative in the true constitutional sense of the term, but not a delegate’. The Reform Act’s allocation of an additional seat to the county facilitated an amicable compromise with the Tories and he was returned unopposed.
A silent and initially lax attender, Weyland was in the majorities against radical motions for economy and pension reductions, 14 Feb. 1833, 20 Feb. 1834, inquiry into economic distress, 23 Mar. 1833, and the abolition of military flogging, 4 Apr. 1833, and backed the Whigs’ Irish coercion bill, 7 Mar. 1833. He was also in the agricultural minorities for repeal of the malt tax, 26, 30 Apr. 1833, 27 Feb. 1834, and inquiry into agricultural distress, 21 Feb. 1834, and in the majority against reducing the corn duties, 7 Mar. 1834. That year he became a vice-president of the Bicester Agricultural Society.
At the 1835 general election Weyland offered again for Oxfordshire as a ‘landholder and farmer’. Alluding to the political crisis created by the king’s dismissal of the Whigs, he welcomed the new premier Peel’s declaration ‘to concede, as far as concession can be made with safety’ and promised to give the ministry ‘a fair trial’. Challenged on the hustings about his absenteeism, he refuted claims that ‘he had only been present for 6 of the 58 divisions’ in the 1834 session, and ‘took a chalk’ for having supported malt tax reduction. He was again returned unopposed.
Weyland duly supported Peel on the speakership, 19 Feb., and the address, 26 Feb., and divided against Irish church appropriation, 2 Apr. 1835, having attended the meeting of dissident reformers at 5 Carlton Gardens on 23 Feb. 1835 summoned by Stanley, who that day listed him among the ‘Derby Dilly’.
At the 1837 general election Weyland initially offered again as a ‘supporter of the constitution’ as ‘established in the revolution of 1688’, who was ‘willing to support all temperate and well-considered reform’. The appearance of a new Liberal candidate and the unwillingness of the Conservatives to again relinquish one of the seats made it ‘impossible to avoid a contest’, however, and finding himself passed over by the newly formed Conservative Association for another candidate he retired.
On the death without issue in 1854 of his elder brother John, a noted critic of the new poor law and Malthusian population theory, Weyland inherited his family’s Norfolk and Suffolk estates, including Woodrising, where he took up residence and died in October 1864.
