It was in Wright's hobbies where he made his greatest mark. Whilst working as a civil servant he was, between 1956 and 1958, President of the Geologists' Association, but after he "retired" in 1976 he could devote his time to his interests. From 1977 to 1983, he was a Research Fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford.[4]
He was married to Alison Readman (1922-2003) with four daughters and a son.[6]
^"C. W. Wright: Distinguished amateur palaeontologist, naturalist and civil servant who led renaissance of provincial museums nationwide". The Times: 70. 24 February 2010.
^Few paleontologists had such an all-encompassing command of a major group of fossils as Wright had of Cretaceousammonoids. See Wright, C. W. with J.H. Callomаn and M.K. Howarth (1996). "Mollusca 4 Revised, Cretaceous Ammonoidea". In Roger L. Kaesler (ed.). Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part L. Vol. 4. Boulder, Colorado and Lawrence, Kansas: The Geological Society of America & University of Kansas Press. OCLC61988855 – via Internet Archive. p.V. This impressive volume had been compiled by him over a period of three and a half decades while working as an "amateur dependent on private resources" and was published in 1996.
^'Giant flying lizard that once stalked Bridlington'. Press cutting from the Leeds Mercury, 16 January 1937.
"C. W. Wright: Distinguished amateur palaeontologist, naturalist and civil servant who led renaissance of provincial museums nationwide". The Times: 70. 24 February 2010.