A leading corn merchant, Sandars was ‘a man of business habits, moderate in his politics, cautious in his movements and slow and deliberate in his resolves’, who took an equivocal position on free trade while serving as Conservative MP for Wakefield.
Sandars took a prominent part in Manchester’s commercial life, serving as treasurer of the Manchester Corn Exchange in 1837.
Having moved to Wakefield, where he was a partner in one of the country’s largest corn-dealing firms, Sandars was soon appearing on local platforms, speaking on proposed railway developments in 1845.
Jones and Erickson have identified Sandars as a Peelite, but Conacher has found that his voting patterns were neither consistently Peelite nor Derbyite, classifying him as ‘uncertain’ in the 1847-52 Parliament.
Sandars’ speeches were ‘always... upon some question with which he was fully acquainted, and [he] consequently was listened to and his views and opinions respected’.
Although his belief that free trade needed a fair trial was a constant refrain, Sandars coupled this with advocacy of a 5s. fixed duty on corn, a potential source of revenue which he argued ‘would, except in years of scarcity, come out of the pocket of the foreign grower, and would not enhance the price of corn’ to consumers, 22 June 1849. This earned him a rebuke from Cobden, who declared that Wakefield’s electors had not returned him ‘to propose a tax upon bread’, and local opponents subsequently attacked him for being ‘a professing Free Trader in Wakefield – a Protectionist in Parliament’.
‘a species of impropriety, approaching to indecency, in a corn merchant who is daily transmitting large orders to the Baltic, the markets of which depend on the British, standing up in the House of Commons to make what would be called in the Stock-Exchange a very “bearing” speech, and trying to convince the British public that he can import any quantity from the Baltic at almost any price he pleases’.
The Times, 29 Mar. 1850. Reports differed as to whether his comments had had any effect on the market: The Times, 26 Mar. 1850, cf. The Times, 6 June 1850.
He was forced to defend himself in the House against charges that he had ‘frighten[ed] the English farmers into selling their wheat at a sacrifice’, 14 May 1850, and was further embarrassed when correspondence with John Villiers Shelley (MP Westminster, 1852-65) revealed that his firm was unable to execute anorder at the disputed price.
Having cultivated the constituency through attendance at events such as the annual soirees of the Church Institution and the Mechanics’ Institute, Sandars sought re-election in 1852.
Sandars made fewer contributions to debate thereafter, but maintained his interest in commercial and fiscal policy. He spoke on Disraeli’s budget, 10 Dec. 1852, praising the distinction it made between income from property and from trades and professions, but objecting to the doubling of the house tax in order to reduce the malt tax. He nevertheless divided in its support, 16 Dec. 1852. The following year, showing his disregard for party ties – Conacher classifies him as an ‘independent Conservative’ in this Parliament
Sandars wound up his Wakefield commercial interests with the dissolution of the partnership of Sandars and Dunn, corn merchants, in October 1857.
