John Blackett, whose family had resided at Wylam, near Newcastle, since the 17th century, had a short-lived parliamentary career as an advanced Liberal. Studying classics at Christ Church, Oxford, Blackett was ‘an able and accomplished’ debater at the Union and, through his friendship with the positivist Richard Congreve, developed strong anti-Tractarian views.
‘Regular and punctual in his attendence’, Blackett spoke frequently and candidly, and was a consistent critic of Aberdeen’s coalition government. On 4 Apr. 1853 he attacked what he perceived to be the ministry’s reluctance to carry out the recommendations of the 1852 Royal Commission on Oxford University, arguing that, without parliamentary intervention, the university would not reform itself, and complaining that ‘the cause of university reform was worse off than when [the Conservatives] were in power’.
A keen observer of colonial affairs, Blackett was a fierce critic of the East India Company, believing that ‘its continuance could only tend to retard progress, to foster nepotism, and to impede the elevation of the Indian races’.
Blackett’s service on select committees included inquiries into metropolitan bridges and the conveyance of mails by railways,
