Welby, who, in his own words, gave ‘a steady and consistent support to the leaders of the great Conservative party’, was the eldest son of Sir Glynne Earle Welby, of Denton Hall, MP for Grantham 1830-57.
At the 1857 general election Welby came in for the vacancy created by his father’s retirement. Echoing his father’s political principles, his address stated that he was ‘hereditarily and deeply attached to that union of church and state’ and while he supported ‘ample religious toleration’, he would oppose any measure ‘which would endanger either the safety, or the Christian and protestant character of our institutions’.
He was in the minority for the Derby ministry’s reform bill, 31 Mar. 1859, and at the 1859 general election, when he was returned unopposed, he explained that while ‘the bill was open to grave objections’, he had backed it because ‘the good preponderated over the evil’.
At the 1865 general election Welby praised Gladstone for his ‘financial abilities’, but warned that ‘he entertained some opinions which ... [were] very dangerous’. He was again elected without a contest. He opposed the Russell ministry’s reform bill, 27 Apr. 1866 and 18 June 1866, and followed Disraeli into the division lobby on the major clauses of the Derby ministry’s representation of the people bill, believing that ‘change must be extensive enough to form a durable settlement’.
In April 1868 Welby resigned his seat in order to offer for the vacancy at Lincolnshire South created by Sir John Trollope’s elevation to the peerage as Baron Kesteven. In his address he pledged to give ‘calm and dispassionate consideration to any scheme that may be proposed’ to remedy the condition of Ireland, but attacked Gladstone’s resolutions, which had been brought forward ‘as a party move’ and ‘an election cry’. For Welby, the real issue was not Irish disestablishment, which would lead to ‘papal supremacy’ in Ireland, but the need to effectively deal with the question of peasant proprietorship of the land, which, if left unaddressed, would lead to further violence.
What are Mr Welby’s antecedents? He has been eleven years Member for Grantham, but he has been so quiet, so silent, so isolated, that no one knew [him] beyond the borough.
Stamford Mercury, 17 Apr. 1868.
In 1875 Welby succeeded his father in the baronetcy, and, as his father had done in compliance with the will of his close friend and distant relative Gregory Gregory of Harlaxton, added the name of Gregory to his own in 1876.
Welby died at Denton Hall, Lincolnshire, in November 1898.
