One of the few MPs in the reformed Parliament to have sat before 1800, Wrottesley was a ‘decided Whig’ and a former soldier, landed gentleman and country banker who spoke with authority on military, agricultural and financial issues.
Wrottesley’s family possessed an ancient lineage and an impressive parliamentary pedigree. His father Sir John, 8th baronet (1744-87), had been MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme, 1768, and Staffordshire, 1768-87.
Wrottesley was returned unopposed alongside Littleton for the new constituency of South Staffordshire at the 1832 general election, when he notably called for free and open competition in banking and a fixed duty on corn.
Wrottesley opposed Lord Chandos’s motion to prioritise agricultural relief, preferring Ingilby’s proposal to reduce malt duty to 10s. per quarter, which he argued would relieve all interests, 26 Apr. 1833.
Wrottesley’s most famous contribution to the first session of the reformed Commons was his motion for a call of the House, 15 July 1833. This aimed to ensure MPs’ attendance in the event of a showdown between the government and the House of Lords over Irish church appropriation. The future American secretary of state, William H. Seward described Wrottesley’s speech as ‘modest and well-conceived’, but others were less complimentary.
Wrottesley made fewer contributions in debate after 1833, but continued to be an active MP. Despite his hustings declarations, he opposed the low fixed duty on corn proposed by Joseph Hume, 7 Mar. 1834, but thoroughly approved of the new poor law passed in the same session.
Wrottesley was returned unopposed at the 1835 general election, when he made a ‘short good speech, plain and professing his Whig politicks in a manly manner’.
Wrottesley backed the Whigs’ proposed tithes commutation bill for England, 10 May 1836. The following year he cautiously endorsed Hume’s county rates bill as, although he did not approve of annual elections, he thought there was ‘a great deal of mismanagement under the present system’.
Privately, the Conservatives had promised to offer no opposition if Wrottesley was returned alongside one of their party at the 1837 general election.
Wrottesley was duly ennobled as 1st Baron Wrottesley in 1838, and made a handful of speeches in the Lords in 1839, before his health deteriorated.
