Bourne was the product of an ‘old and respected Liverpool family’ which had long been associated with the commerce and public life of the city, having been successful in the timber and iron trades, salt and coal mining, canals and railways. He was one of nine children of an ‘eminent’ merchant and colliery proprietor, who was also an active magistrate and alderman of the city.
A ‘staunch Conservative’, Bourne had unsuccessfully contested Wexford borough in 1841 as a protectionist and anti-repealer.
An active militia officer, Bourne was one of the originators of the volunteer movement in Lancashire, his corps being regarded as ‘one of the finest militia regiments in the kingdom’.
Bourne entered the Commons pledged to oppose Edward Baines’s borough franchise bill, which, by lowering the franchise to £6, would ‘be a downward step towards democracy’.
Bourne was re-elected for Evesham in 1868 after which he continued to take a parliamentary interest in the volunteer movement.
Having been in delicate health for some time, he died suddenly at his home in March 1882, and was buried in the family vault at Holy Trinity church, Wavertree. Although he was ‘a devoted churchman’, and regarded as a ‘Tory of the old school’, he was committed to ‘the fullest liberty of conscience’, and was said to have had ‘many friends among the Liberals’. He was well-regarded for his ‘sterling commercial honour, his extensive, although unostentatious charity, and his valuable but not paraded public services’.
