Ireland was a prosperous and progressive Suffolk landowner with uncompromising Protestant opinions. That his tenure in parliament was so short was in large part due to his having resolved to win a seat by whatever means available to him, his apparent lack of scruple leading to his political eclipse at the hands of an election committee.
Ireland was born in London, his family presumed to have descended from a younger son of ‘the ancient house of Ireland of Hale Hall’ in Lancashire. He was the only child of Thomas Ireland, a solicitor who was called to Staple Inn in 1786, and who served as the inn’s principal from 1829-33.
In 1834 Ireland was bequeathed ‘a considerable landed property’ at Ousden, Suffolk, by his uncle, and he also held land in Cambridgeshire.
Ireland had parliamentary aspirations, and prior to the 1847 general election is said to have sought an introduction to a seat among the country’s ‘low agents’ before he was eventually adopted by the Conservatives of Bewdley.
In the meantime Ireland questioned the wisdom of withdrawing protection from both agriculture and ‘native industry’, telling local Conservatives that he doubted whether the erstwhile followers of Sir Robert Peel ‘would be content to be dragged … at his chariot wheels, and linked under his yoke’.
Ireland was unseated on 10 Mar. 1848 and the Bewdley election was subsequently declared void on grounds of treating and bribery by the agents of both candidates.
Ireland died at his residence in Upper Harley Street, London, in July 1863, when his personal estate was sworn at £45,000.
