The Walcots were a very old Shropshire family with a considerable interest at Bishop’s Castle. But Walcot’s father dissipated the fortune, and by the time Walcot was of age the estate was heavily mortgaged. Sir Francis Dashwood, who took his Walcot nephews under his wing, wrote to Charles on 20 June 1761:
The more I consider the bewildered state of your affairs, the more difficulties occur in judging and forming an opinion what to do. You talk of living with credit and satisfaction in Shropshire. A man of spirit would hate to go near the place. Is there any credit to saunter about home with a gun, and not have wherewithal to buy you clean linen? ... The net income of the whole estate will not pay the interest of the debt upon the whole estate, and your father proposes that you should allow him £100 a year. Where is this to arise? The answer is by sale of parts of the estate.
And next Dashwood seems to have advised him to ‘sell the whole estate’—‘I ... am very sorry I so long hesitated’, wrote Walcot to Dashwood, 26 July 1762,
When in April 1763 Dashwood was summoned to the House of Lords as Lord Le Despenser, Walcot succeeded him at Weymouth on the Government interest. Yet in September, on a vacancy caused at Bishop’s Castle by the death of Francis Child, Walcot felt obliged to support George Clive against the Government candidate, Walter Waring: which, wrote Peregrine Cust to Walcot, ‘will be disapproved by all your family’.
In Parliament Walcot followed his uncle’s lead; adhered to the Grenville Administration; was classed by Rockingham in July 1765 as an opponent, and voted against the repeal of the Stamp Act, 22 Feb. 1766. He was classed as ‘Tory, Bute’ by Rockingham in November 1766, and as Tory by Newcastle, 2 Mar. 1767; and voted with Administration on the land tax, 27 Feb. 1767. There is no record of his having spoken in the House.
For the seat promised to Walcot by Clive at Bishop’s Castle, he first meant to put up his younger brother John. On 23 Aug. 1767 he wrote to Le Despenser
In December 1767 Le Despenser inquired if Charles ‘would like to come in again and would attend the business of the House’.
I ... should be very glad to accept it [replied Walcot] if I could procure any preferment that would answer the difference of expense it will be to me to bring up my family to London; I would then give my attendance, and (except in particular questions) join in supporting any Administration you should think proper to be concerned in. I am only afraid of the expense, as my family is increasing; else should certainly prefer the honour of sitting in Parliament, to retiring into the country.
No such arrangement was apparently made, and Walcot does not seem to have stood again for Parliament.
He died September 1799.
