Sherriff was born in humble circumstances in Aberdeen, and was in early life a school-master at Armley, near Leeds, where he married the daughter of a local Methodist maltster and lectured to local working men’s societies.
Having revived the fortunes of the railways in his charge, Sherriff retired when the West Midland company amalgamated with the Great Western Railway in 1863.
Sheriff proposed the iron founder Richard Padmore as the Liberal candidate for Worcester in March 1860, and that November was chosen as a representative for Claines on Worcester town council.
The public service rendered by his business success led to Sherriff being invited to stand as a Liberal candidate for Worcester when the sitting member retired at the 1865 general election.
An ‘effective rather than eloquent speaker’, he took little part in parliamentary debates, but occasionally questioned the home secretary over misconduct by poor law officials and magistrates, particularly towards minors.
Sherriff was an active constituency member, who readily afforded ‘counsel and active help’ to ‘the respective interests of the Corporation and other public bodies’, such as Worcester’s licensed victuallers and friendly societies.
When Sherriff was re-elected in 1868, even the Conservative Berrow’s Worcester Journal ‘rejoiced’, holding that he was ‘not a narrow-minded man’ and had ‘no sympathy with cliques’. As ‘a good citizen of Worcester’, it continued, he was ‘a credit to that strong, energetic, noble class of men who have sprung up in the north of England, in connection with iron and railways, and given an impetus to our trade and commerce in all parts of the world’.
