Perry-Watlington, described by a contemporary as having ‘an excellent heart and an eloquent tongue’, had only a brief parliamentary career, but his subsequent work on behalf of local institutions and national commissions ensured that he was remembered locally as ‘one of the most prominent and universally-esteemed of our Essex magnates’.
Thomas Perry, this Member’s father, was the fourth son of John Perry II. He worked for the East India Company in Bengal and was the only son to marry. His wife, Maria Jane, was the second daughter and co-heir of the barrister George Watlington, of Caldecote House, Hertfordshire. Born John Watlington Perry in 1823, this Member succeeded his father to the family estates in 1833, and took the additional surname Watlington by royal licence, 10 Apr. 1849. A Cambridge graduate, he was admitted to the Inner Temple in 1844 but was not called to the bar. He instead focused his energies on county life, and was appointed a magistrate in 1849 and served as high sheriff in 1855. Prior to entering the Commons he also became a manager of the Harlow reformatory school and a chairman of the committee of visiting justices to Chelmsford Prison.
Perry-Watlington’s first and only parliamentary election campaign was beset by controversy. Brought forward by local Conservatives for Essex South at the 1859 general election, his alleged connection to the controversial Puseyite Alfred Poole dominated the contest. Poole, originally a curate at St. Barnabas, Pimlico, had his licence revoked in 1858 due to a scandal over allegations of improper questioning of women in the confessional. In 1859, with his appeal being considered by the privy council, he received vocal support from the Puseyite vicar of Perry-Watlington’s Harlow parish.
If you divide politicians, as I see the Times does, into two great divisions – Conservatives and Liberals – then I say I am a Conservative. ... If you proceed further to arrange them into four divisions – Whigs, radicals, Tories, and Liberal Conservatives – I am a Liberal-Conservative.
Essex Standard, 4 May 1859.
Following an extremely bitter and personal contest, he was elected in second place, over 350 votes ahead of his Liberal opponent.
Despite his professions to be a ‘Liberal-Conservative’, Perry-Watlington followed Disraeli into the division lobby on the major issues of the day. A steady attender, he voted against the amendment to the address, 10 June 1859, and opposed Palmerston’s ministry on important economic issues, such as the commercial treaty with France, 24 Feb. 1860, and the equalisation of the customs and excise duty on paper, 6 Aug. 1860. He voted for Disraeli’s motion criticising the government’s handling of the Schleswig-Holstein question, 8 July 1864. He used his maiden speech to argue against the abolition of church rates, asserting that the proposed measure would ‘benefit a few by inflicting a great justice on the many’ and lead to the disrepair of the nation’s churches, 28 Mar. 1860. Thereafter he consistently voted against the measure. An occasional, though assertive speaker, he also pushed for the withdrawal of the Liberal government’s representation of the people bill on the grounds that there was insufficient statistical information to forecast what the effects would be of lowering the householder franchise, 7 June 1860. He consistently voted against radical motions to equalise the borough and country franchises. Echoing his continuing interest in penal reform, he was appointed to the 1865 select committee on the prisons bill.
The main topic of Perry-Watlington’s parliamentary contributions, however, was the proposed enclosure of Epping Forest, an ancient woodland that lay partly in his Essex South constituency. When first addressing the issue, he rejected a call for an inquiry into the legality of recent enclosures in the forest, insisting that, as landowners had enclosed land for public recreation, these enclosures had great public benefit, 3 Mar. 1863. Appointed to a subsequent select committee on the issue, he voted consistently (and often in the minority) against recommendations for the Crown to stop landowners enclosing areas of the forest.
At the 1865 dissolution Perry-Watlington announced his retirement from the Commons, explaining that, given his other commitments, he ‘could not perform his duties in a proper manner’.
Perry-Watlington died while staying at 2 Waterloo Crescent, Dover, in February 1882.
