A Conservative squire, Halford was a staunch defender of the established Church, whose later parliamentary career was notable for his ‘zealous and persevering’ campaign to secure legislative redress for Leicestershire’s hosiery workers.
In 1832, Henry Halford, the only son of the famous physician, was returned unopposed in a compromise with a Whig for the new constituency of South Leicestershire, where the family seat was situated. In Parliament, he defended Leicester’s Tory corporation from the attacks of reformers, supported currency reform and the repeal of malt duty, but opposed a low fixed duty on corn.
Halford was returned unopposed at the 1835 and 1837 general elections, alongside another Conservative. At the former election he promised to defend ‘those great institutions on which depend the efficiency and freedom of our ancient form of government’, and he generally voted with his party in opposing further political reforms and the government’s Irish policy.
At the 1841 general election Halford topped the poll in a crushing victory over the Liberals, after which he and his colleague faced no further opposition.
By now, Halford was increasingly preoccupied with the distress of Leicestershire’s framework knitters.
Halford was returned unopposed at the 1847 general election, although a challenge had been mooted by some local Conservatives unhappy with his Maynooth vote.
At the 1852 general election, when he was returned unopposed, Halford abandoned agricultural protection, but placated local farmers with his support for reform of the county rates and the repeal of malt duty.
Halford retired at the 1857 general election. In the 1830s Halford, who was fluent in French, German and the classics, and read works of political philosophy, economics and history in the original language, had regularly compared the Whigs to the Girondins, and in his later years began a history of the French Revolution.
