Houldsworth was a self-made entrepreneur.
Before Houldsworth took his seat, there was trouble at his Manchester mill, where strikers intimidated the mother of a child employee. He had them charged under the Combination Acts. Benjamin Hobhouse, under-secretary at the Home Office, wrote to a local magistrate:
it is much to be wished that the masters in general would follow the example of Mr Houldsworth. Greater good would be effected by proving that the law when put into force is capable of repressing the mischief than by any other means.
Soon afterwards the strikers returned to work and Houldsworth ‘immediately set out for Pontefract to attend the races’.
Houldsworth was a doubtful quantity in his first Parliament. He said nothing, it seems. His only known votes were with two minorities, for the reduction of the Admiralty board, 18 Mar. 1819, and, next day, for an amendment moved by Folkestone to the royal household bill. On 26 Apr. he took a fortnight’s leave for business reasons. He remained a Member for 34 years and extended his business interests in 1836 by partnering his brother Henry in the establishment of the Coltness iron works in Lanarkshire. He died 1 Sept. 1852.
