‘Honest Matty Bell’ was a descendant of Matthew Bell of Mersington, Berwickshire, through whose marriage in 1677 to Ann, daughter of Thomas Salkfeld, the family gained property and influence in Northumberland. Upon coming of age, Bell, whose father had died three years earlier, became one of the great Northern coal owners and his marriage to Sarah, daughter of the Charles Brandling MP, secured him further mineral properties. He gained distinction by organising the local regiment of yeomanry cavalry in 1819, and commanded the unit during the Tyne pitmen’s strike of 1830-2. Returned in the Tory interest for Northumberland after a fraught by-election in 1826, Bell acquired a reputation as an anti-reformer which eroded his popularity with his constituents. Faced with formidable pro-reform opponents, he retired from parliament at the 1831 general election.
At the general election of 1832 Bell declared early as a Conservative for the new double-member constituency of Northumberland South and called for the abolition of colonial slavery and the removal of tithes, and attacked free trade. Despite being assailed with ‘volumes of falsehood and slander’ during a markedly bitter contest, he defeated his cousin, the Liberal William Ord, to come in with Thomas Beaumont.
A man of few words in the Commons, Bell attended infrequently in 1833 and voted against a second reading of the Jewish disabilities bill, 22 May. More active in 1834, he supported Althorp’s amendment to the pension list question, 18 Feb., and the Chancellor’s motion that church rates be replaced by monies raised from the land tax, 21 Apr., but voted against the ministry over the admission of dissenters to universities, 17 Apr. Thus, his claim, made during the 1835 general election campaign, that he was ‘free from the trammels of party’ appears to have had some substance.
Bell faced no opposition at the 1837 general election and used his nomination speech to attack ministers over the new poor law and municipal reform in Ireland, though he gave them his support over the commutation of tithes.
After a lively nomination, where he vociferously defended his opposition to free trade, Bell was returned without a contest at the 1841 general election.
Bell came forward for the last time at the 1847 general election and explained that, although in the minority over repeal, as his conduct was influenced by national interests, not party considerations, he would not join any party against Peel. Bell promised that he would never ‘grant or withhold his support for any administration because of factious motives’ and cited his recent support for the Russell ministry’s education bill and the Irish poor law as evidence of his independent nature.
A rare contributor to debate during his three decades in parliament, Bell’s ‘tastes were perhaps better adapted for the faithful discharge of the local functions of his position than for taking a prominent part in imperial questions’, and although his political ambitions undoubtedly impoverished his estate, he never sought office.
