‘Honest’ Andrew White was born into a prominent Sunderland business family with extensive interests in shipping, banking, and the coal, timber and iron trades. He took over the family business, with his younger brother Richard, in 1833, following the death of his father, John, who had established the family’s wealth and become one of Sunderland’s most eminent merchants and shipowners. Renowned for his philanthropy, White, who in 1836 broke away from the official Methodists to join the Wesleyan Methodist Association, was a champion of religious nonconformity and defended interdenominationalism in a short tract titled Recommending Christian Charity and mutual forbearing amongst various religious denominations.
White came forward as a Liberal for his native town at the 1837 general election, declaring that ‘if I am not the friend of the people of Sunderland, I do not know who is’. A ‘thorough-going’ reformer, he was returned in second place after a fractious campaign.
In the Commons, White largely confined himself to succinct speeches on shipping issues and ‘although not adorned with rhetorical flourishes’ his contributions provided ‘solid and important information’.
White declined to defend his seat at the 1841 general election, and retired in order to focus on his business interests, which had recently been failing. In common with his fellow shipowners, he sustained heavy losses in the early 1840s due to sinkings and competition from the transport of coal by rail, and in 1846 the family firm collapsed and he was declared bankrupt. White and his brother had also been actively involved in company promotion during the joint stock boom of the 1830s and the collapse of the Sunderland Joint Stock Bank in 1851 led to allegations that he and his brother had used the bank’s funds for personal loans.
