Wingfield, who had only a perfunctory parliamentary career in this period, was a member of a politically distinguished family, with his father, grandfather and two of his brothers-in-law all having sat in the Commons. His father, the renowned barrister William Wingfield, whom Thomas Creevey once described as ‘the most successful humbug simpleton I have known in all my life’, had represented Bodmin, 1806-7, and served for a quarter of a century as master of chancery, 1824-49.
Following in his father’s footsteps, Wingfield entered Christ Church College, Oxford, before embarking on a legal career. Called to the bar in 1827, he was appointed chief secretary to his brother-in-law Sir Charles Christopher Pepys, master of the rolls (and MP for Malton, 1831-36), in 1834, and continued to serve Pepys in that capacity when he was appointed lord chancellor two years later.
At the 1857 general election Wingfield was brought forward by local Liberals for Essex South. His address underlined his zealous support for the established church, though he also called for some alteration in the church rates.
Wingfield failed to make any discernable impact in his first Parliament. He rarely spoke in debate and was absent for most of the 1858 session, owing to his father’s precarious health.
The 1859 general election contest underlined the difficulty Wingfield-Baker had in squaring his unwavering devotion to the established church with his support for the abolition of church rates. Repeatedly attacked by his Conservative opponents for his vote in favour of Trelawny’s bill, he insisted that his wish to stop the ‘destruction of peace and harmony that arose upon their collection’ was motivated entirely by ‘Christian principles’.
Wingfield-Baker offered again at the 1865 general election, when he made the repeal of the malt tax the centrepiece of his campaign, but was comfortably defeated.
Wingfield-Baker died after being thrown from his horse while riding at his elder brother’s Sherborne estates in March 1880.
