A ‘handsome, pleasant, dashing, man about town’,
Lawley’s father, Paul Beilby Lawley, had taken the surname of his uncle, Richard Thompson, on succeeding to his extensive Yorkshire estates in 1820. However, his children, whose mother was Catherine Gladstone’s aunt, kept his original surname. A ‘lifelong Liberal’, he sat for Wenlock, 1826-32, and the East Riding, 1832-7, and in 1839 was created Baron Wenlock, a family title which had been in abeyance since 1834.
Lawley, known to his friends as Frank, was educated at Rugby, where he won prizes for Greek iambics and Latin verse.
found myself starting in life with no definite purpose – with no strong bias in favour of any profession – with no propensity that I can now recall except a partiality for strong and unwholesome excitements – which with a Yorkshireman’s tastes and opportunities, soon ripened into a passion for the Turf.
Lawley to Gordon, 15 Aug. 1854, BL Add. MS. 49234, f. 32.
Having previously gambled for amusement, Lawley in 1849 turned to the Turf to make money, having acted as security for a friend for a substantial debt which was now being called in.
None of this, however, was public knowledge when Lawley came forward in April 1852 as Liberal candidate for Beverley, where he offered alongside his cousin, William Wells. He admitted that he and Wells were ‘entire strangers’, but addressed the voters as ‘brother Yorkshiremen’ and cited his family’s connection with the East Riding, noting that they ‘at many times, “in season and out of season,” have advocated principles of enlightened Liberal Reform’. He was ‘most emphatically, in every sense of the word, a free-trader’. Warning that the Derby government would attempt to re-impose the corn laws, he urged voters not to be ‘humbugged by some such word as a re-adjustment of taxation, or addition to the revenue’. He had heard Joseph Hume speak in the Commons the previous week on electoral reform, and declared his own support for household suffrage, recognising the importance of ‘timely concessions’ on this question. If elected to Parliament, he would not be ‘a drone in the hive’.
At Westminster Lawley generally voted with the Liberals, dividing in support of free trade, 27 Nov. 1852, and opposing Disraeli’s budget, 16 Dec. 1852. When Gladstone became chancellor of the exchequer that December, he appointed Lawley as his private secretary.
Lawley took the Chiltern Hundreds, 24 July 1854, in anticipation of his appointment as governor-general of South Australia, a position which he and his friends hoped would remove him from the temptations of ‘Newmarket and the clubs’.
I cannot thank Lawley enough for his kindness in accompanying me everywhere, through tan yards & forges, shaking all the black grimey fellows by the hand, as if he were standing for a fresh election himself. His pleasant open manner has quite won the hearts of the good people here, & does me great service. I like him very much & wish I knew him better. Well I know he takes all this trouble for love of you.
A. Gordon to W.E. Gladstone, 27 July 1854, in P. Knaplund (ed.), ‘Gladstone-Gordon correspondence, 1851-1896: selections from the private correspondence of a British prime minister and a colonial governor’, Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 51 (1961), 16.
‘How admirably do all these events dove-tail!’, jibed the Daily News. ‘First, there is a Prime Minister wanting votes, with a son wanting a seat. Next there is a sporting gentleman wanting anything that a generous Government has to bestow, and possessing a seat which is the very thing for the Prime Minister’s son.’
Defending his brother-in-law during this debate, Wortley made it clear that Lawley’s family and friends had been kept in the dark about his speculations.
Tell it not in Gath that England is so fallen, so degenerate, that, although the mother of fifty colonies, she is incapable of finding a better governor to fill a vacancy than a young man of twenty-eight, very gay in his habits, and almost totally destitute of official experience!
Daily News, 4 Aug. 1854; The Times, 4 Aug. 1854.
Gladstone noted in his diary the following day that ‘the solitude of my Private Secretary’s room which has been like a mill for 18 months was very melancholy... Pressure begins for F[rank] L[awley’]s immediately abandoning his office as Private Secretary. This again makes me sad, to part from the unhappy’.
In July 1862 Lawley began a new phase in his career, when he was appointed as a war correspondent for The Times in America in succession to William Howard Russell, at a salary of £1,000 per annum.
Gladstone, to whom Lawley remained close throughout his life, helped with Lawley’s ‘financial rehabilitation’ after his return home and during the 1866-7 reform crisis used him as an intermediary with the Adullamites.
Latterly resident at Woodlands, Station Road, Sidcup, Kent,
