A youthful baronet and West India proprietor, Young offered silent support to the Conservative party and agricultural relief during his brief parliamentary career. The fortunes of the family had been established by Sir William Young, 1st baronet (1724-88), governor of Dominica. He bequeathed four Caribbean plantations as well as Delaford Park, Buckinghamshire, to his son and namesake the 2nd baronet (1749-1815), who was governor of Tobago from 1807 until his death, and sat on the Grenville interest as MP for St. Mawes, 1784-1806, and Buckingham, 1806-7.
The munificence of Parliament has placed a large sum of money at the disposal of the Commissioners to reimburse West India proprietors for the interest they possessed in their slaves, but it never was in contemplation of the legislature to confer a boon upon those who by fraud and the most iniquitous proceedings have become possessed of the property of others.
Sir William Lawrence Young to the Commission, 2 Oct. 1835, Slave Compensation Commission Records, The National Archives: T71/1602, bundle 2, qu. in Draper, Price of emancipation, 201-2.
Young stood for Buckinghamshire at the 1835 general election and was elected in second place along with two other Conservative candidates. His support for the established church, repeal of malt duty and the corn laws echoed that of his running mate and self-styled ‘farmers’ friend’, the marquis of Chandos (a member of the Grenville family).
A silent member, Young voted with the Conservative leadership for Manners Sutton on the speakership, for the address and against Russell’s Irish church resolutions, 19, 26 Feb. 1835, 2 Apr. 1835. However, he was in the minorities in favour of Chandos’s motions for the repeal of malt duty and for a select committee on agricultural distress, 10, 25 May 1835, and E.S. Cayley’s motion for a silver standard, 1 June 1835. His votes followed a similar pattern thereafter, opposing the Whigs’ Irish policy and radical political reform, but again backing Chandos’s motion on agricultural distress, 27 Apr. 1836. At the 1837 general election, when he was re-elected in third place, Young emphasised political and constitutional issues, rather than agricultural distress. He declared that he had ‘no confidence in the Whigs’ and was ‘disgusted in seeing the Irish faction having such prevailing interests in their councils’.
They proposed to lower the duty on slave-grown sugar, and thus encourage the competition of the Brazilians with our West Indian colonists. He for one thought this bad policy, and therefore he voted against it. He thought it would injure the colonies, and not benefit the consumer, and he would not therefore give his sanction to any measure which would be of so little benefit to the community, while it would jeopardize the great experiment of negro emancipation.
The Standard, 6 July 1841.
The following year, Young cast votes in favour of Peel’s revised sliding scale on corn, the reintroduction of income tax and against radical political reform, before dying at the age of 35. He was succeeded in turn by his three eldest sons: after the deaths of the 5th and 6th baronets in the Crimean War the title passed to Sir Charles Lawrence Young, 7th baronet (1839-78), a barrister.
