Described by his proposer on the hustings at Pontefract in February 1851 as ‘an amiable, generous, highly-connected, and independent gentleman of liberal principles’, Lawley had a perfunctory Commons career, cut short by his succession to the peerage only 15 months later.
Born at the family residence in Berkeley Square, Lawley was the eldest son of Paul Beilby Lawley, who had taken the surname of his uncle, Richard Thompson, on succeeding in 1820 to his extensive Yorkshire estates, centred on Escrick Park, near York. His children, who were related through their mother to Catherine Gladstone, retained the surname Lawley. A ‘lifelong Liberal’,
Educated at Eton and Cambridge, Lawley’s coming of age was celebrated with festivities at York and Escrick in 1839.
In November 1850 Lawley came forward for a vacancy at Pontefract, created by the appointment of the Liberal incumbent as a judge. On his first appearance he was introduced as ‘a Yorkshireman, a member of a noble family, the son of one who was a Reformer in times when reform was not fashionable’. Lawley likewise cited his family’s long-standing commitment to the cause of reform. He declared himself to be – in the words of Prince Albert at a recent banquet at York – ‘liberal from feeling’, and ‘was sure he had none of the germs of old Toryism in his composition’. Questioned about extending the franchise, he stated that ‘his feeling was decidedly with progress, but that it must be in accordance with the advancing intelligence of the people’.
At the nomination in February 1851, Lawley asserted that he was ‘bound by no party, but independent of all parties’ and came forward as ‘the advocate of Liberal principles, which his family had always held’.
Lawley took his seat, 17 Feb. 1851, and cast his first vote three days later, in the minority for the second reading of the Great Northern railway bill. He generally divided with the Russell ministry, supporting it on the ecclesiastical titles bill, 25 Mar. 1851. He voted against Peter Locke King’s county franchise bill, 2 Apr.; repeal of the malt tax, 8 May; and William Johnson Fox’s proposals for secular education, 22 May 1851. He did not trouble the House with any speeches, and is not known to have served on any select committees. His most noteworthy contribution to parliamentary life was his appearance for the victorious Houses of Parliament side when they played cricket against I Zingari at the Oval in July 1851.
Wenlock ‘did not take a prominent part in debate’ in the Lords, but was more active in the committee-rooms.
Having joined the yeomanry cavalry as a cornet in 1837, he continued this activity in later life, serving as lieutenant-colonel of his regiment from 1859 until 1876, when failing health led him to take the role of honorary colonel.
Wenlock died of heart disease at Escrick Park in November 1880 after ‘a short illness’.
