Hughes, born in
Maker Vicarage,
Cornwall, was the fourth son of Sir Robert Hughes, third
baronet, by his second wife, Bethia, daughter of Thomas Hiscutt, and was a nephew of Admiral Sir
Richard Hughes. His father, who
matriculated from
Trinity College, Oxford, on 30 March 1757, aged 17, was a demy of
Magdalen College 1758–67, B.A. 1761,
M.A. 1763, rector of
Frimley St Mary and Weston, Suffolk, from 1769 until his death, and was buried on 4 June 1814. William was admitted to the bar at
Gray's Inn on 11 June 1833, and practised as a conveyancer on the Western Circuit, where he was also auditor of the
poor-law union district of Cornwall and
Devonshire. He died at Millbay Grove,
Plymouth. ==Works==