Sir William Payne Gallwey was a former army officer, who had sold his commission and retired in 1842.
Given his background, it was fitting that Gallwey’s first known Commons speech, in 1855, was on the subject of pensions for officers who had served in the Crimea.
The Northern Echo was scathing about Gallwey’s speaking abilities: ‘although he has heard the burning words of Mr Gladstone, the polished satire of Mr Disraeli, the sustained eloquence of John Bright, and the incisive epigrams of Mr Lowe, he has never acquired the art of public speaking’.
Gallwey displayed a sustained interest in the workings of the Westminster Improvement Commission, complaining in 1860 that its neglect of its duties had left Victoria Street ‘the receptacle of all the filth in the neighbourhood, and the resort of the vice and degradation of that dense population’.
After the Second Reform Act, Gallwey continued to attend and vote, although he rarely spoke in debate. His Irish Protestant family sympathies (being the grandson of the 1st earl of Dunraven) led him to oppose Gladstone’s Irish policies; he voted against the second reading of the Irish Church Bill, 23 Mar. 1869.
