A Shropshire landed gentleman and farmer, Whitmore was a self-taught political economist and early free trade campaigner. Although generally regarded as a Whig or Moderate Reformer, Whitmore ‘refused to identify himself with the prescribed policy of any particular party’.
I have no turn naturally for public speaking … Except that when from previous study he may have real information upon the subject under discussion, or where the interests of his constituents are more immediately involved, it appears to me the duty of such an individual to abstain from speaking in debate.
William Wolryche Whitmore to Joseph Barker, 30 May 1832, Dudmaston MSS, held by Dudmaston Hall, National Trust, DUD 8/11.
An observer commented that Whitmore used ‘plain language & speaks with decision and fluency’, although his speeches were usually carefully prepared. He also had ‘a habit of ifting his arms above his head … which often gives a notion of solemnity not well suited to everyday matters of business’.
Descended from a junior branch of the Whitmores, of Apley, Whitmore had succeeded to the Wolryche estate of Dudmaston on his father’s death in 1816, and became a progressive landlord and farmer who experimented with improving methods on his relatively small estate.
Whitmore accepted an invitation to contest the new constituency of Wolverhampton at the 1832 general election, although he was concerned about the cost, remarking that:
I do not expect to obtain a seat in Parliament without expense, but I am from peculiar circumstances both unable and unwilling to purchase it at the cost which to some habituated to election expenses may appear [to be] of no moment.
Despite his free trade credentials, Whitmore was strongly opposed by radicals on account of his unwillingness to support the immediate abolition of the corn laws.
In the reformed Commons, Whitmore continued to focus on economic and social questions. He called for the equalisation of sugar duties, 6 Mar. 1833. However, the chancellor of the exchequer, Lord Althorp, argued that such a major change in policy was inexpedient when slavery was about to be abolished in the West Indies and the East Indian trade was about to be opened.
He reprised these themes when proposing a 10s. fixed duty on corn, 17 May 1833, admitting that his speech was ‘of a very dry unentertaining nature’.
A critic of the poor law, which he described as ‘that incubus which pressed upon the land and ate it bodily up’, Whitmore strongly supported the imposition of a stricter system of public welfare effected by the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834.
Whitmore retired at the 1835 general election and did not seek a return to Parliament. He was considered but passed over for appointment as one of the new commissioners for South Australia.
Whitmore gave up his London residence in 1844, writing to a friend that ‘the fact is, for some time I have found London anything but a pleasurable residence, hardly but few acquaintances & scarcely any society there & as life advances & health declines I find the comfort of domestic society more than ever needful’.
Whitmore died childless two years later. The Dudmaston estate, encumbered with debts of £40,000, and a personalty of £14,000, passed to his nephew Rev. Francis Henry Laing, of Forthampton, Gloucestershire, who assumed the names of Wolryche and Whitmore.
