Born into the Courtauld business dynasty, Taylor was one of a younger generation of Radicals sympathetic to the demands of labour, who championed European liberal nationalism and were firm believers in international arbitration.
From the mid-1840s, Taylor was an active supporter of continental nationalism, and with his wife, the Unitarian feminist Clementia (1810-1908), successive London residences became salons for British and European radicals.
At Westminster, Taylor’s speeches were infrequent, fairly short, and rather urgent, often referring to opinion ‘out of doors’, but his main contributions in the chamber were through questions. He was a strong supporter of the North in the American Civil War, not only because of his opposition to slavery, but because of his belief that it was the legitimate government. Recognising the Confederacy would not only violate international law, Taylor warned the House, but would also give the United States government ‘a just casus belli against England’.
At the 1865 general election Taylor was re-elected in second place behind another Liberal and retired from Courtaulds, withdrawing his capital of £72,000 to focus on politics.
Re-elected at the 1868 general election, the following year, the Taylors converted their Notting Hill home, Aubrey House, into an adult education institution, with a library, but closed it four years later, and moved to Brighton.
