A merchant and former governor of the Bank of England, Weguelin was an expert on commercial issues, who ‘devoted much of his attention to the subjects of finance, trade, and currency’, and was a reliable supporter of the Liberal governments of Lord Palmerston.
Weguelin’s father was an East India proprietor who also owned Bank of England stock.
Weguelin’s most significant contribution in his first session was his evidence to the select committee on the Bank Acts. In his testimony, he argued against altering the 1844 Bank Act, even to enforce a more rigid separation of the banking and issue departments.
In the chamber, Weguelin again criticised the great ‘loss and inconvenience’ the Sound dues inflicted upon merchants, 5 June 1857.
Weguelin was an active participant in the financial debates that took place after Parliament’s emergency recall in December 1857. Although he was a supporter of limited liability, he denied that the unlimited liability of joint-stock banks was a prime cause of the crisis, 8 Dec. 1857, and argued that the distinction between limited and unlimited liability in banks was often unclear.
Weguelin backed Palmerston in the votes on the conspiracy to murder bill in 1858. In the same session he argued that as banking was different from other businesses, the principle of limited liability should be modified to ensure that banks were stable. However, his amendment to the joint-stock companies bill to preserve a degree of individual liability for joint-stock banks was rejected 40-128, 10 June 1858.
Defeated at Southampton at the 1859 general election, Weguelin returned to the House after his victory in the acrimonious Wolverhampton by-election in July 1861. His two rivals described him as ‘one of the richest men in London’, a placeman, and the nominee of the local Liberal clique.
Weguelin backed the Liberal government’s 1866 reform bill and the following year voted with the majority of Liberal MPs in favour of enfranchising compounders and lodgers and increasing the representation of the largest towns at the expense of the smaller boroughs, 12 Apr., 20, 31 May, 3,17 June 1867. However, the main focus of his parliamentary activity continued to be commercial and financial issues. He served on an 1866 committee that recommended improving the postal communication between Britain and India.
Weguelin was re-elected for Wolverhampton in 1868 and 1874 before retiring at the 1880 general election.
