In his brief parliamentary career, Attwood, a City businessman with banking and shipping interests, offered vigorous opposition to the new poor law. Like his father Matthias and his uncle Thomas, both of whom he joined in Parliament, he was a critic of the monetary orthodoxy, but on other issues he inclined towards the Toryism of the former rather than the Radicalism of the latter.
Attwood’s grandfather had established a bank in Birmingham in 1791 and his father Matthias (1779-1851) managed the London branch which by 1805 ‘was rapidly becoming completely independent of the Birmingham connection’.
In Parliament, Attwood divided with his father against the appropriation of Irish church revenues and the repeal of the corn laws, and his opposition to political reform was shown by his vote against his uncle’s motion that the Commons consider the first Chartist petition, 12 July 1839. Attwood’s commercial interests were reflected in his hostility to a proposal to give an advantage to ‘land-borne coal at the expense of sea-borne coal’, 12 July 1838, and he was critical of Sir Matthew Wood’s attempt to fund City improvements by a tax upon coals, which ‘was the most objectionable and oppressive tax which could be levied’, 16 July 1838.
However, the major theme of Attwood’s speeches was his hostility towards the poor law commissioners, who, he protested, ‘had placed themselves in direct opposition to the House of Commons’ by not implementing any of the recommendations made by an 1838 select committee report.
At the subsequent general election Attwood was one of the slate of Conservative candidates who contested the four City of London seats. In his public speeches, he targeted Lord John Russell, one of the Whig candidates, and the government’s proposed alterations in commercial policy. Describing free trade as a ‘most pernicious and delusive doctrine’, Attwood was not opposed to an alteration in sugar duties, but thought it was a ‘complete fallacy’ to assume that an alteration of the corn laws would benefit the labouring classes, when in fact it would be swiftly followed by a reduction in wages.
It appears that Attwood made no further attempts to return to Parliament, but focussed on his commercial interests. On his father’s death in 1851, he inherited Dulwich Hill House, and a share in the family bank.
