William Seymour Blackstone (1809–1881) was an English MP in the Parliament of the United Kingdom.
Elected Conservative MP for Wallingford, Oxfordshire, England in 1832, he served until 1852, when the constituency refused to re-adopt him.
He defended the Corn Laws, and was one of the rebels who opposed Robert Peel over Free Trade in 1846, causing the fall of the government.
He lived at Castle Priory, Wallingford, built for his grandfather, but decided to build a still-grander house, Howbery Park, across the Thames in Crowmarsh Gifford.
However, he fell into debt, largely because of the costs of building this new home, and spent time in the debtors' prison at Oxford.