The eldest son of a Dudley manufacturer, Hawkes was maternally descended from the ancient family of the Wootons of Wooton Hall, Staffordshire, who lost their extensive family estates under King Charles II.
Alongside his business interests Hawkes was a landed proprietor in Worcestershire, Lancashire and south Staffordshire, where he resided near Dudley, and was a captain of a local troop of yeomanry cavalry and a county magistrate.
Hawkes had acquired significant personal popularity at the election, his defeat being attributed solely to a delay in commencing his canvass. He was therefore approached again at the 1831 general election, this time allegedly ‘backed by the purse’ of the earl of Dudley.
After his native borough of Dudley was enfranchised under the Reform Act, Hawkes entered the field at the 1832 general election, but soon withdrew.
Hawkes was one of very few Black Country MPs in this period to have a strong personal link with his constituency, yet to his opponents he was ‘an old … backsliding Tory’, bereft of political principles and ‘utterly unfit for a representative’.
At the 1835 general election, Hawkes flatly refused to ‘enter parliament fettered with pledges’, and beat an ‘Ultra Reformer’ by a clear margin.
Hawkes voted for Agnew’s Sabbath observance bill, 21 Apr. 1836, and divided in favour of the motion that it was derogatory to the character of the House for any member to become the paid advocate of an outside body, 30 June. In July 1836 he gave evidence to the committee on the Stafford borough disenfranchisement bill, but does not appear to have been a particularly regular attender at this time, voting in only 29 of the 195 divisions reported in 1836.
By 1837 Hawkes was convinced that the ‘stalking horse of Reform had lost its powers’, but was nevertheless challenged at Dudley by a Liberal. In a stormy contest both candidates had to be bound over by local magistrates to keep the peace when a duel seemed imminent.
Hawkes remained a firm supporter of Peel, regarding him as ‘the only man capable of effectually fighting the ‘battle for their church and their constitution’.
Having divided for Sir John Yarde Buller’s motion of no confidence in the government, 31 Jan. 1840, he backed Stanley’s Irish registration bill that May, and opposed the Whig measure the following year. He voted with Peel over foreign sugar duties, 18 May, and was again on hand to back Peel’s successful motion of no confidence in the Whig ministry, 4 June 1841. Although at the 1841 general election Hawkes’s ‘private circumstances’ - presumably his mounting debts - and divisions amongst the borough’s Conservatives were expected to impede his return at Dudley,
Having voted with Peel on the address, 27 Aug. 1841, Hawkes backed his corn importation bill and the re-introduction of income tax in the spring of 1842. In July 1842 he spoke against the third reading of Lord Ashley’s mines and collieries bill, arguing that the coal owners of Staffordshire had not been afforded time to respond to the measure.
On returning to England, Hawkes was arrested for debt and adjudged bankrupt on his own petition in October 1857. He obtained a bankruptcy certificate a year later and, having secured the capital of his wife’s settled trust fund for the use of his children, died at Brighton in December 1858.
