Strutt, grandson of the famous cotton spinner Jebediah Strutt, had first been elected to Derby as a reformer in 1830. His political inclinations stemmed from his intellectual upbringing and family background and through his Cambridge connections he came into contact with the leading figures of the liberal intelligentsia, including Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill. Another factor in the formation of Strutt’s politics was his family who were Unitarian cotton manufacturers and part of the Whig-Liberal clique which controlled Derby politics before 1832.
Electorally, Strutt benefited from his family’s position in Derby and the traditional alliance between Derby Liberals and the Devonshire interest. However, he was forced to become more responsive and accountable as local Conservatism grew in strength and local Liberals and Dissenters became more assertive. Throughout the 1830s he diligently presented petitions in favour of Radical and religious reforms.
An infrequent contributor to debate whose interventions were always short, Strutt was capable of speaking with lucidity and intensity on subjects about which he was passionate. He was strongly in favour of the abolition of the newspaper stamp duty, arguing that it would improve ‘the moral condition of the people’ as education would become more ‘widely diffused’.
Unsurprisingly, given his antecedents and philosophical outlook, Strutt was resistant to factory legislation, although he was careful to point out on the platform that he supported protection for children.
It was in committee that Strutt did much of his work. A reliable attendee who made few interjections, he served committees dealing with education, banking, and from 1845, that on Railway Bills, where Strutt’s interests increasingly lay. On his return to Parliament, Strutt resumed his membership of the successor inquiry on Railway Bills, which he chaired in the 1854-55 and 1856 sessions.
His expertise in this area led to Strutt’s appointment to the government as Chief Commissioner of Railways in 1846. In 1847, he made a two-hour speech in favour of a Railways Bill, announcing only at the end that it was being withdrawn, much to the consternation of MPs and others.
In 1856, the Times claimed that Strutt’s elevation to the Lords ‘marks the surrender of feudalism to industry’.
