Born at Heighington, county Durham, Surtees was the third son of Robert Surtees, of Redworth House. His grandfather, Crosier Surtees, who was described as ‘a designing artful man’ and ‘a bad character’, had acquired the Redworth estates through marriage to his cousin Jane Surtees in 1769.
At the 1865 general election Surtees offered as a Conservative for Durham South. The contest was a bitter one, and his campaign speeches, which consistently attacked Palmerston’s foreign policy, were often interrupted by disorder, but backed by the influential industrialist Ralph Ward Jackson, founder of West Hartlepool, he was returned in second place.
Surtees spoke infrequently in the Commons, and his handful of known interventions chiefly concerned defence issues. He unsuccessfully urged the government to introduce pensions for widows and children of deceased militiamen, 8 May 1866, and his request for government action to protect the batteries at Hartlepool was also rebuffed, 20 May 1867. In an apparent protest against the proposed relaxation of the rules governing parliamentary oaths, his only known motion was for the oath taken by Roman Catholic MPs prior to its repeal in 1866 (29 & 30 Vict., c. 19) to be read by the clerk, 30 Apr. 1868. Gladstone criticised the motion as ‘an attempt to stir up the embers of religious animosity’, while Disraeli urged him to withdraw the motion, as ‘every Roman Catholic Member is equitably bound to conform to the existing law, and to that alone’, but Surtees, who gave no explanation for his motives, persisted until defeated.
At the 1868 general election Surtees was beaten by two Liberal candidates.
