Remembered as ‘a sort of king amongst the Newcastle men’, Joseph Cowen entered parliament in 1865 as a ‘Radical-Reformer’ after a distinguished career of public service on Tyneside.
Cowen, whose political sympathies were well-known on Tyneside, had been secretary of the Winlaton branch of the Northern Political Union, a marshall for the protest against the Peterloo massacre on Newcastle town moor in 1819, and played a prominent role in local agitations for parliamentary reform and for the repeal of the corn laws. In 1849 he was part of the Newcastle Chamber of Commerce delegation that attended the Paris Peace Conference. A poor law guardian, councillor and alderman, Cowen was best known for his chairmanship of the River Tyne Commission, of which he was made a life member by parliament.
At the 1865 general election, Cowen, representing the town’s radical interest, came forward for Newcastle in opposition to two moderate Liberals. Calling for a reduction in taxation, and stressing both his local credentials and his familiarity with the committee rooms of parliament, he was comfortably returned at the top of the poll.
Successfully defending his seat at the 1868 general election, Cowen maintained his pro-Irish stance, opposing a succession of coercive legislation, but he began to discharge his parliamentary duties ‘with less assiduity’.
