With his father and grandfather having represented Northumberland, and his brother sitting for the southern division of the county from 1852 to 1885, Somerset Beaumont was a member of a politically distinguished family, who owned extensive estates and lead mines in the region.
An occasional speaker, Beaumont’s contributions were mainly concerned with promoting commercial treaties with European states.
A regular attender in the early stages of his parliamentary career, Beaumont consistently supported Palmerston’s administration, voting for the abolition of church rates, 14 May 1862, against the repeal of the Maynooth grant, 2 June 1863, and against Disraeli’s motion rebuking the government’s policy over the Danish conflict, 8 July 1864. To the dismay of his constituents, however, Beaumont, who opposed universal suffrage and the ballot, voted against Edward Baines’s motion for a £6 occupier borough franchise, 11 May 1864.
Beaumont returned to parliament in 1868 as a Liberal MP for Wakefield, and thereafter focused his energies on attempting to remove bishops from the House of Lords.
