John Bowes, ‘a name familiar as a household word in the county of Durham’, was the illegitimate son of John Bowes, tenth earl of Strathmore.
At the 1832 general election Bowes offered for Durham South. Although he stressed his ‘freedom from party connexions’, his address, which strongly advocated popular education, freedom of religious faith, and the abolition of slavery, confirmed his credentials as a Reformer.
Bowes attended frequently but is not known to have ever spoken in the Commons. His known select committee service was also limited.
At the 1841 general election Bowes’s advocacy of a sliding scale on corn duty, rather than a fixed one, was strongly criticised by a group of Darlington’s leading Liberals, who urged him, unsuccessfully, to modify his stance.
Bowes attended steadily during his fourth Parliament, following Lord John Russell into the division lobby on most major issues, including his motion against the reintroduction of income tax, 13 Apr. 1842, and his motion to consider the state of Ireland, 23 Feb. 1844. On the factories bill, however, he generally divided with Peel’s ministry, 18 Mar. 1844, 22 Mar. 1844. In November 1843, after successfully backing his own horse in the Derby, which earned him £22,000, he was the subject of a ‘qui tam’ legal action for ‘excessive or deceitful gaming’, brought forward under the obsolete statute of 9 Anne, c. 14.
Following his retirement at the dissolution in 1847, Bowes wrote to his agent that ‘the town is full of electioneering. What a luxury it is to see all this and know one has not to pay for it!’
In 1847 Bowes settled in Paris, where he met Josephine Benoîte Coffin-Chevallier, an actress and painter, whom he married in 1852. Thereafter the couple became prodigious art collectors, and in 1869 the Bowes Museum, designed to house their collections, was begun at Barnard Castle, county Durham.
