A Scottish landowner and West India proprietor, Wallace was an indefatigable Radical Reformer. The Times dismissed him as an ‘exemplary political quack’, and another observer remarked that his ‘honesty of purpose is frequently interfered with by a blundering style and dogged obstinacy’.
Self-confessedly ‘born with a silver spoon in his mouth’, Wallace hailed from a wealthy Glasgow merchant family.
Wallace was elected for the new borough of Greenock as a ministerial supporter at the 1832 general election, but, as he noted in his maiden speech, 11 Mar. 1833, since being returned he had ‘found it to be his duty to oppose them’ on the address, sinecures and Irish coercion.
Wallace was more limited in his spoken contributions, although during the debate on burgh reform, 26 July 1833, he voiced support for a £5 municipal and parliamentary franchise and unsuccessfully proposed an elected magistracy in Scotland.
a very indifferent speaker. He is always audible, but there is something hard and shrill about his voice which grates on the ear: it has no flexibility: it is the same key and the same tones from beginning to end. His enunciation is rapid; occasionally, but not often, he stammers slightly. His language has no pretensions to eloquence: it is plain and unpolished.
[Grant], Random recollections, 296.
Wallace had never studied law ‘except by observation’, but had become increasingly critical of the Scottish judicial system, especially the Court of Session (also known as the Scottish Supreme Court).
Wallace commenced his other campaign in a speech lasting three hours, 6 Aug. 1833, which assailed the management of the post office, prompting some observers like James Silk Buckingham, Radical MP for Sheffield, to question whether he had been manipulated by interested parties.
Wallace seems not to have spoken or voted on the abolition of slavery in the British empire in 1833. He later remarked that as he ‘had a deep interest in the colonies … he never uttered a word against the measures before the House, although he had great interests at stake, and had suffered severely by the passing of those measures’.
After his unopposed return at the 1835 general election, during which he called for the duke of Wellington and Sir Robert Peel to be impeached, Wallace resumed his twin campaigns in Parliament.
Wallace abandoned his motion for a select committee on Hill’s plan, 9 May 1837, but after being re-elected for Greenock at the general election that summer, an inquiry was granted.
Alongside his involvement in the penny post campaign, the energetic Wallace had continued to voice criticism of the Court of Session, and unsuccessfully moved for inquiries into sheriffs’ courts and the administration of justice in Scotland, 22 Mar. 1838, 12 Feb. 1839, 2 Mar. 1841.
no Scotch representative can carry on successfully any public measure affecting Scotland without his nod and concurrence. He is commander-in-chief of all our Parliamentary business. No independent member can move a peg, or get a bill forward a single stage, without his approval.
Hansard, 10 July 1840, vol. 55, cc. 599-617 (at 613).
Wallace was also increasingly alarmed at the mounting economic distress in the country, which he attributed to the corn laws and a restrictive monetary system.
Wallace also condemned the House’s treatment of public petitions, and unsuccessfully proposed that the restriction on speaking on petitions in the chamber be relaxed, 7 Feb. 1842.
In his last years in the Commons, Wallace twice attempted to cut the Scottish supreme court from thirteen judges to nine, and abandoned another motion to restore parliamentary speaking on petitions.
The septuagenarian Wallace resigned suddenly on 3 April 1845, prompting Richard Cobden to complain that ‘the crotchety old fellow gave no warning to his friends’.
