Born at Blandsfort House, Queen’s County, Bland was the youngest son of a local landowner and former soldier. He was descended from a Yorkshire gentry family which had settled in Ireland in the mid-1660s, his grandfather, John Bland, having inherited the family property from his uncle, General Humphrey Bland, who was governor of Gibraltar and commander-in-chief in Scotland in the 1750s.
Educated at Dublin and Cambridge, Bland travelled widely on the continent as a young man. He was called to the Irish bar in 1829 and practised on the home circuit, becoming well regarded in Irish legal circles and obtaining silk in January 1854.
Bland came forward for King’s County at the 1852 general election, when he declared himself ‘a friend of progressive legislation, reform of the representative system, a modified tenant-right, civil liberty, and religious equality’.
Bland made more than 50 contributions to debate, and was an increasingly regular attender, voting in 66 of the 257 divisions of the 1853 session, and 91 of 198 in 1856.
Bland was concerned with legal reform and supported the Irish chancery bill in February 1856, arguing that the business of the Incumbered Estates Court should be transferred to the reformed court. However, a year later he objected strongly to the judgments and execution bill, which he claimed would disadvantage ‘the Irish commercial community’ and ‘be used as an instrument to compel people to pay what they never owed’. By extending the principle of centralisation, he contended, it would deprive Irish people of ‘a ready means of obtaining justice’, by putting ‘them to the expense of defending cases in the metropolis which might be tried on the spot’.
In spite of doubts expressed within his own constituency about the degree to which he was independent of Palmerston’s ministry, Bland had proved a reliable supporter of Irish land reform and, having undertaken ‘to oppose any government not advocating a tenant-right bill’, he was re-elected unopposed for King’s County in 1857.
Bland voted for Jewish emancipation, 15 June 1857, and voiced support for the second reading of the oaths bill, 10 Feb. 1858.
Bland supported the removal of ‘taxes upon knowledge’ and joined a deputation to the prime minister, Lord Derby, to urge the necessity of repealing the paper duty, 11 Feb. 1859.
Bland was employed for many years as senior crown prosecutor for counties Meath and Carlow, and, after rumours had circulated that he was to be a judge of the bankruptcy court or baron of the Irish exchequer, he ‘subsided into the comparatively insignificant berth’ of a chairmanship of quarter sessions.
