The younger brother of the Whig cabinet minister Sir John Cam Hobhouse, 2nd baronet, Hobhouse was finally returned to Parliament at the fifth attempt, in 1841, but had to retire barely three months later due to the collapse of his bank. Descended from Wiltshire gentry, Hobhouse is not to be confused with his Tory cousin and namesake (1776-1854), a government clerk and state archivist, whose diary, from 1820-7, was published by Arthur Aspinall in 1947.
Hobhouse’s bank, known as Messrs. Henry Wm. Hobhouse and Co., of Bath, had been founded 1768, and most of its business was with local gentry. Hobhouse’s father Sir Benjamin Hobhouse, 1st baronet, was associated with the firm from 1796 until his retirement in 1830.
Having suffered defeat at Great Grimsby in 1831, Hobhouse came forward as a Reformer for Bath, where his bank was based, at the 1832 general election.
Hobhouse lost the 1836 Warwick by-election by an agonising thirty votes, when his conduct incensed the influential Liberal agent and native of the town, Joseph Parkes, who wrote to the government whip Edward John Stanley that ‘the shabbiness of H. Hobhouse & the way I find he left this boro’ is almost beyond credit - but is fact. He … never offered to advance a farthing (& never did)’. Having evaded contributing to his election committee’s expenses, Hobhouse paid for his personal servants’ bill, but not before complaining that he had been wrongly charged for two cups of tea. This prompted Parkes to comment:
Now was there ever such a fellow? … There is but one feeling of contempt for him, & if he ever changes horses in the town they will soak him with Leamington water. I call it a swindle, & had he won (which he would have done with pluck) I dare say he would have behaved as ill.
Joseph Parkes to Edward John Stanley, 27 Mar. 1837, MS Kingsland, in P. Salmon (comp.), ‘The letters of Joseph Parkes’ (1993), transcript.
Although he was derided as an ‘itinerating vagabond’ and a ‘perfect stranger’ to the city, Hobhouse was returned in second place for Hereford at the 1841 general election.
Despite his backing advanced reforms, Hobhouse entered Parliament as a firm supporter of the Whig leadership. Shortly after his return he declared that his ‘great Polar Star in the House of Commons’ was Lord John Russell.
Less than a month later the London papers published the sensational news that Hobhouse’s bank had stopped payments.
Hobhouse made no known attempt to re-enter Parliament. He became heir to his childless elder brother, who was created 1st Baron Broughton in 1851, but predeceased him by a year. On Broughton’s death in 1869, the barony became extinct but the baronetcy passed to Henry William’s surviving son, Sir Charles Parry Hobhouse (1825-1916), 3rd baronet, a lawyer and judge. His son, Sir Charles Edward Henry (1862-1941), 4th baronet, was MP for Devizes, 1892-5, and Bristol East, 1900-18, and held office in the Liberal governments of 1892-5 and 1905-15, serving as postmaster-general from 1914-15, prior to the formation of the wartime coalition.
