Having ‘made a large fortune in the calico trade’, Turner sat for almost a decade for his native borough, but made little impact at Westminster.
Turner’s great-grandfather, a farmer from Martholme, near Blackburn, began business as a chapman, dealing in cloth woven on handlooms.
In 1826 Turner became Cheshire’s high sheriff, acquiring a new degree of social standing.
Offering at Blackburn in 1832, Turner advocated retrenchment, abolition of ‘all useless Offices’, pensions, sinecures, monopolies and restrictions on trade, revision of the corn laws, reductions in taxation, abolition of slavery and ‘the enactment of all measures that can be devised to give protection and support to the labour of the Artisan’.
Although said by later accounts to be ‘broadly Whiggish’ or ‘little more than a Liberal Conservative’ in 1832, Turner was classified by Dod the following year as a ‘Radical Reformer’, which was seemingly borne out by his votes.
However, seeking re-election in 1835, together with Feilden, who had gone over to the Conservatives, Turner declined to ‘coalesce’ with Bowring, and declared himself ‘attached to no particular party’.
Turner’s ‘coquetting with the Conservatives’ did not, however, last long, as he was among those members of the Derby dilly who divided with Russell on the Irish church, 2 Apr. 1835 and 23 July 1835
Offering again in 1837, Turner described himself as an enemy to the new poor law and its centralising aspects.
Turner initially decided against seeking re-election in 1841 on grounds of ‘age, increasing infirmities, and recent domestic affliction’ – his wife had died that April
