Seeking election for the East Riding of Yorkshire in 1832, Thompson declared himself ‘a consistent constitutional Whig, and an independent country gentleman’, and these principles guided his conduct during his five years in the Reformed Parliament. While generally supportive of Whig ministers, he was unafraid of voting against them, notably on agricultural questions and the Irish church. Yet he was sufficiently loyal to be rewarded with a peerage in 1839, two years after election defeat ended his Commons career.
Born Paul Beilby Lawley, Thompson had changed his name in 1820 after succeeding to extensive estates at Escrick, Yorkshire, on the death of his maternal uncle Richard Thompson. These estates had previously been owned by Richard Thompson’s older brother, Beilby (1742-99), who had sat for Hedon, 1768-80, 1790-6, and Thirsk, 1780-4.
Thompson had been mentioned as a possible candidate for Yorkshire in 1830,
Addressing his constituents in 1835, Thompson noted his ‘inability to discharge the duty of publicly speaking in parliament for your advantage’.
Although Thompson claimed after the close of this Parliament that he had been absent ‘not one day… on private business. He had not paired off once’, this exaggerated his assiduity.
Seeking re-election in 1835 Thompson reiterated his position as ‘an independent country gentleman’ and ‘an impartial supporter of the late liberal and enlightened ministry’.
Thompson’s conservatism was demonstrated early in the 1835 Parliament. Having divided against Peel’s ministry on the speakership, 19 Feb., the address, 26 Feb., and Chandos’s motion for repeal of the malt tax, 10 Mar. 1835, he entered the lobby with the Conservatives to vote against Russell’s motion on the Irish church, 2 Apr. 1835. The ‘pain’ he felt in diverging from his party prompted him to break his parliamentary silence, 1 Apr. 1835, when he spoke ‘if not wisely, at least fearlessly and independently’ to explain his reasons. He acknowledged that he might be considered ‘a rigid Protestant’, but cited his past support for Catholic emancipation. He believed it would be an injustice to Irish clergymen to appropriate the property of the Irish Church, and considered such appropriation ‘pregnant with danger to every other species of property’. The Morning Post praised him as ‘an honourable and upright Whig… whose conscientious sense of duty compelled him to desert his party upon this occasion’.
Aside from this vote, Thompson divided mainly with the new Melbourne ministry, backing them on Irish municipal corporations in the 1836 session and voting against Radical motions on the abolition of military flogging, 13 Apr., and pensions, 19 Apr. 1836. At the annual meeting of the Yorkshire Central Agricultural Association in November 1835 he had declared his ‘unflinching, nay almost innate, attachment’ to the agricultural interest and promised to do all in his power to secure relief for them.
At the 1837 general election Thompson noted that he and Bethell had ‘acted in the most perfect unanimity and good feeling, for the last five years’. He was therefore ‘bereft’ and ‘injured’ that their shared representation of the East Riding was under threat, the Conservatives having fielded a second candidate alongside Bethell (to the latter’s distaste).
There were, however, rumours in April 1838 that rather than returning to the Commons, Thompson would be elevated to the Lords as one of the coronation peers.
Wenlock continued to play a significant part in local public life. Having attended the first annual meeting of the Yorkshire Agricultural Society in 1838, he maintained his involvement with that body, as well as with local agricultural societies.
Having ‘been labouring under indisposition for some time’, Wenlock died at Escrick Park in May 1852.
