A Conservative barrister, Wigram’s parliamentary career was terminated by his judicial appointment three months after his election. His father, Sir Robert Wigram, 1st baronet, was a wealthy East India merchant who had represented Fowey and Wexford in the unreformed Parliament.
In 1818 Wigram married into the Arkwright family, of Willersley Castle, Derbyshire. After 1832, their cousins, the Arkwrights, of Hampton Court, Herefordshire, exercised increasing influence in the borough of Leominster and this connection prompted Wigram to offer at the 1837 general election. During the campaign he promised to support an alteration in the new poor law to prevent the separation of families in the workhouse.
When he stood again for Leominster at the 1841 general election Wigram was returned without opposition, after deriding the Whig government’s reliance on the ‘petticoat influence’ and Irish and Radical support to stay in office.
In his new capacity as a vice-chancellor, Wigram gave evidence to the 1842 parliamentary inquiry. He recommended that the law courts should be moved from Westminster to Lincoln’s Inn fields to be nearer to the bar; alternatively, a library and accommodation could be provided for legal counsel at Westminster.
On his death in 1866 Wigram left a personal estate of £70,000 and was succeeded by his eldest son James Richard (1819-92), a captain in the Coldstream guards.
