Charlesworth, a wealthy colliery proprietor, had a perfunctory career as Conservative MP for Wakefield. His family had lived near the town since the seventeenth century. Charlesworth’s great-grandfather was a gardener, whose father was probably a shoemaker. His grandfather, Joseph (1749-1822), entered the coal business in the late 1760s, and by 1809 was operating seven pits ‘through collective agreements with mining gangs’.
In 1847 Charlesworth married the daughter of Walker Featherstonhaugh, who operated the Wear Glass Bottle Company, near Sunderland.
A ‘forceful character’, Charlesworth did not play a particularly prominent part in Wakefield politics before his selection as Conservative candidate in 1857, although he was a local magistrate and patron to institutions such as the Wakefield grammar school, where he served as a governor from 1852, and the Clayton hospital, of which he was president from 1855.
Generally voting with the Conservatives, Charlesworth supported the Maynooth grant, 29 Apr. 1858, but divided against abolition of church rates, 8 June 1858. He opposed the removal of Jewish disabilities, backing Sir Frederic Thesiger’s amendment to the oaths bill, 15 June 1857, and was in the minority against the second reading of the Jewish disabilities removal bill, 16 July 1858. He divided in support of Palmerston’s motion for leave to bring in the conspiracy to murder bill, 9 Feb. 1858, but was absent from the division on the second reading, 19 Feb. 1858. He opposed further measures of electoral reform, dividing against the abolition of the property qualification, 10 June 1857, triennial parliaments, 20 Apr. 1858, the ballot, 8 June 1858, and the county franchise bill, 10 June 1858. However, he voted with his party in support of the second reading of the Derby ministry’s reform bill, 31 Mar. 1859. Outside the House, Charlesworth faced ‘bitter’ industrial unrest, with an eight-week colliery lockout in late 1858, during which an unsuccessful attempt was made to break the strike at his Rawmarsh colliery by importing workers from Staffordshire. However, industrial relations improved once trade unionism had been accepted.
On seeking re-election in 1859, Charlesworth declared his support for Derby’s government, but explained that he had voted for their reform bill because it might have been improved in committee, but would have opposed the third reading.
Charlesworth’s professed ignorance did not prevent him from being committed for trial at the York assizes in July 1860 (alongside Leatham, John Barff Charlesworth and several others), with nine counts of bribery filed against him.
Before going on trial, Charlesworth had in December 1859 declined the opportunity to stand for a vacancy at Pontefract, and he is not known to have sought a return to the Commons.
Charlesworth died in March 1880 ‘after a lingering and painful illness’, having been in poor health for over two years. He was buried at Sandal church, and was also commemorated with a stained-glass window at Grinton church.
