John Bell came from a long-established Thirsk family, who had first settled in the town in the sixteenth century. His great-grandfather, Ralph Bell, served as the borough’s MP from 1710 to 1717.
Bell was first returned for Thirsk in 1841, although he had taken an interest in politics before this, having attended the inaugural meeting of the North Riding Liberal Registration Association in 1837, at which a district association for Thirsk was also established.
Bell was described by The Examiner in 1841 as a ‘staunch Reformer’, and by a local history published in 1859 as a ‘moderate liberal’, who was ‘a constant advocate for general education, liberty of conscience, the press, and general reform; although opposed to vote by ballot, and the repeal of the corn laws’.
Bell was re-elected unopposed in 1847, but does not appear to have attended Westminster again. His friend, Joshua Crompton
