Wilson’s father, a former tutor of William Pitt who regarded himself as a friend as much as a protégé of the prime minister’s family, commended his sons Giffin and Gloucester to him, 20 Feb. 1789, just after the former had been called to the bar:
they both have ambition, understanding and information ... that ... will not disgrace your patronage either in the courts of law or in the senate. It will I am sure be the glory of their lives to be active in your service.
Pitt could not then satisfy Giffin’s parliamentary ambition and his father wrote, 20 Dec. 1789, ‘I flatter myself that the weight of your opinion has for the present at least allayed the warmth of his ardour’.
Pitt found a customs place for Gloucester Wilson ten years later but was in his grave before Giffin, a Chancery lawyer, found his way into Parliament. He came in unopposed for Yarmouth, paying £3,500, on Lord Suffield’s interest when Lushington, one of the sitting Members, was evicted for opposition sympathies in 1808.
Wilson had known for over a year that the Suffield interest at Yarmouth was in eclipse, but he stood again in 1812, only to be defeated. He resumed his legal career, took silk and became a master in Chancery. He died 4 Aug. 1848, aged 82.
