Described by Lord Durham as a ‘straight forward and uncompromising reformer’, Blake was born at Heston, Middlesex, the eldest son of Sir Francis Blake, a political writer, and senior partner in the Newcastle-upon-Tyne bank of Blake, Reed and Company, who owned the 2,000 acre Twizell estate in Tilmouth Park, county Durham, and held substantial interests in Berwick.
In anticipation of an expensive contest at the 1832 general election, Blake took out an additional £3,340 mortgage that July, and following a fierce contest where he declared his support for poor law reform, church reform and the abolition of slavery, he was returned in second place.
At the 1835 general election, Blake’s financial difficulties prompted the Berwick Harmonic Society to stage a concert and ball to raise funds to return him ‘free of all expense to himself’.
His parliamentary career over, Blake’s commitment to reform became more pronounced and he subsequently published two radical pamphlets: Peers all alike (1838), which advocated an elected Upper Chamber; and The House of Lords, the People’s Charter and the Corn Laws (1839). In the latter, he attacked the ‘proud feeling of superiority in the aristocracy’ and argued that Melbourne’s ministry had been ‘baffled by the Tories, to whom they tacitly submit, not from weakness of their cause ... but from a short-sighted politic in risking future danger for present ease’. Giving his implicit support for extensive reform of the franchise, he therefore urged the Whigs to ‘unite cordially with the people, to support Reform on the first great principle of constitutional government – that the supreme power belongs by right to the people’.
Blake died without legitimate issue in August 1860 at his London house in Sloane Street.
