Wilson, a prominent Suffolk landowner, sat briefly as a Liberal for the western division of his native county. His father, Joseph, had been a silk manufacturer in Spitalfields, London, before relocating to East Anglia where he purchased estates at Little Mossingham, Norfolk, and Stowlangtoft, Suffolk, where Wilson resided.
At the 1835 general election Wilson accepted a requisition from local electors to stand for Suffolk West following the retirement of the division’s two sitting Members. He was backed by the 4th duke of Grafton, who held extensive estates in the region.
I am not a Radical. I hate Radicals, but for that very reason I am a Reformer. Our object is to uphold, not destroy, to perpetuate, not overturn. Though a churchman, I am not a bigot, but am ready to plant my standard upon the platform of religious liberty.
Parliamentary test book (1835), 175.
Reflecting the strength of the local rural interest, Wilson also repeatedly stressed his commitment to agriculture, arguing against free trade in corn (which he had been accused of supporting) and calling for repeal of the malt tax and a reform of tithes.
Despite his previous assertion that he was a ‘Reformer’, Wilson, alongside the earl of Euston, the eldest son of his patron the 4th duke of Grafton, voted with Peel’s ministry on the speakership, 19 Feb. 1835, and the address, 26 Feb. 1835. A leading article in the Liberal Bury and Norwich Post reported ‘a good deal of surprise and disappointment’ amongst his supporters in Suffolk, while the Conservative Ipswich Journal cited his two votes as an example of the ‘good sense which prevails in East Anglia’.
Wilson put himself forward again at the 1837 general election, but he was too ill to face ‘the labour and anxiety of a contest’ and took no active role in the campaign.
Following his defeat, Wilson, who continued to be plagued by ill health, largely withdrew from political life, though he served as high sheriff of Suffolk in 1845 and played an active role in the Central Suffolk Agricultural Association.
Wilson died at Stowlangtoft Hall after prolonged suffering from ‘a severe and painful malady’ in June 1866.
