Speaking at the inaugural meeting of the Cheshire Whig Club in 1821, Wilbraham claimed that ‘from his earliest infancy’ he had been encouraged to look to Lord Crewe, a confidante of Charles James Fox and the county’s MP from 1768-1802, ‘as a model for imitation’.
Remembered as ‘very touchy’ and ‘extremely irrascible’ by the diarist Lady Elizabeth Westminster, Wilbraham was the son of an unsuccessful politician who had sat fleetingly on the family interest for Bodmin from 1789-90 before making way for a more talented younger brother.
At the 1832 general election Wilbraham stood for the newly created division of Cheshire South, where he was a substantial landowner. He had recently fallen out with the Westminsters over the costs of local jurisdiction, and his candidature further exacerbated tensions with that family, who had come to resent him as an ungrateful upstart.
A fairly regular attender, Wilbraham gave steady support to the Grey ministry on most major issues, although he frequently acted with his prominent brother-in-law Ebrington in pushing for more extensive reforms of the church and sinecure system. He lost little time in denouncing the appointment of Welsh bishops who were ignorant of the ‘native’ language, 4 Mar. 1833, and regularly spoke and presented petitions in support of Welsh church reform and Dissenters’ grievances.
At the 1835 general election Wilbraham stood his ground in South Cheshire as a ‘constitutional reformer’, who considered ‘some reform’ of the established church ‘essentially necessary’.
Rumours that Wilbraham would be raised to the peerage in 1837 came to nothing and at that year’s general election he was opposed by two Conservatives.
In his final parliament Wilbraham gave steady support to the government of Lord Melbourne, who became a regular guest at his dining table and in 1839 appointed Ebrington as Irish viceroy.
It has been suggested in a previous History of Parliament volume that Wilbraham’s defeat by two Conservatives at the 1841 general election resulted from his conversion to corn law repeal.
Another issue that featured in the campaign was Wilbraham’s staunch opposition to an 1840 Act enabling established churches to be built in Cheshire using surplus funds from the river weaver tolls, which had hitherto been used to defray the local rates.
Wilbraham offered but then declined to stand a poll in Cheshire South in 1847.
