Milton was one of ‘very few’ parliamentarians who were present both at the opening of the first Parliament of Queen Victoria’s reign in 1837, in which he sat for his family’s pocket borough of Malton, and the first Parliament of Edward VII’s reign in 1901, by which time he was one of the oldest members of the Lords.
Born at Milton, Northamptonshire,
Not long after his 21st birthday, Milton was returned unopposed for a vacancy at Malton, where his father controlled both seats. He later claimed to have been ‘called unwillingly into Parliament’.
Milton sought re-election at Malton at that year’s general election, but also offered for Northamptonshire North, following a requisition from 1,000 voters.
There were repeated claims that Milton was ‘not very staunch’ in his Liberalism,
It had been reported in July 1840 that Milton would offer for the West Riding at the dissolution, and he duly stood in 1841 alongside Lord Morpeth.
It initially seemed that Milton would quickly find an alternative seat. His election address for Northamptonshire North was reportedly ‘already in type’, but he did not offer.
It was reported in January 1846 that Milton would again contest the West Riding at the next election.
Milton duly divided for the third reading of the repeal of the corn laws, 15 May 1846. He opposed the Irish coercion bill, 25 June, having earlier been in the minority which endorsed Daniel O’Connell’s motion that this measure was ‘arbitrary, unjust, and unconstitutional’, 1 May 1846. He was otherwise rarely present in the lobbies, but took a growing interest in Irish concerns. He chaired a meeting in 1845 of the Clonmel, Kilkenny, Carlow and Wicklow railway company,
Following his unopposed return Milton departed on his yacht for the Mediterranean, and did not take his seat until 10 Mar. 1848, a month after the new Parliament opened.
At the 1852 election Milton was re-elected unopposed alongside a Conservative, promising to uphold the same principles as before.
Milton stood for re-election as a supporter of Palmerston at the 1857 general election, when he declined to comment on the issue of tenant right.
Fitzwilliam did not make his maiden speech in the Lords until 1860, and was not active thereafter. Shortly before his father’s death he had been appointed as lord lieutenant of the West Riding, a position he held until retiring due to ‘enfeebled health’ in 1892.
He spent ‘a considerable part of each year’ at Coollatin Park, where he was ‘on friendly terms with his tenants’.
Fitzwilliam died at Wentworth in February 1902 ‘from bronchitis, following on a severe cold’.
