William Schaw Lindsay, whose family background is unclear, was probably the third son of Joseph Lindsay of Ayr. Orphaned at an early age, he came under the guardianship of his uncle, William Schaw, a minister of the Secession church, before running off to Liverpool, aged fifteen, to seek employment. Initially destitute, he became a cabin-boy on a West Indiaman merchant ship, and his career trajectory thereafter was remarkable. In 1835 he became chief mate of the Olive Branch, and a year later was made captain. He received a sabre wound from a pirate, whom he then shot dead, in the Persian Gulf in 1839, before retiring the following year. After a five year spell as a ship fitter for the Castle Eden Coal Company at Hartlepool, he moved to London to begin his shipbroking activities, and founded W.S. Lindsay and Co. in 1849. He rapidly amassed 220 vessels in his fleet, making him one of the largest shipowners in the world, and during the Crimean War, his ships were under charter to both the British and French governments.
After being soundly defeated at the 1852 by-election at Monmouth and narrowly losing the poll at the 1852 general election at Dartmouth, Lindsay came forward at the Tynemouth by-election in March 1854. Although standing as a Liberal, he described himself as a ‘free trade Conservative’, because he desired the ‘maintenance of peace and order’. After a lively campaign he narrowly defeated his Conservative opponent.
In the summer of 1855, Lindsay played an active part in the formation of the Administrative Reform Association. At its inaugural meeting, he launched a scathing attack on the government’s handling of shipping services to the Crimea, exposing what he believed to be ‘official indolence and inefficiency’.
Returned unopposed at the 1857 general election, Lindsay predicted in a letter to Cobden that Palmerston would be ‘drowned ere long in the stream of liberals now rushing into the House, all pledged to move ahead’.
The weeks following his return proved the most controversial of his parliamentary career. Described by Disraeli as one of ‘some dozen men of doubtful Liberal allegiance’, Lindsay acted as an intermediary between the former and Roebuck in the days preceding the address, and at the Willis’s rooms meeting of 6 June, he spoke out against the proposed attack on Derby’s ministry.
Lindsay’s outspoken support for the Confederate states also courted controversy. He had travelled widely in North America before the civil war, and, on his return, announced to the Commons his intention of moving a resolution to recognise the Southern states, which he believed ‘must become an independent nation’, 20 June 1862. A year later, he accompanied Roebuck to an audience with Napoleon III, where the emperor, according to Lindsay, expressed his willingness to act with Britain in recognising the Confederate government.
Lindsay’s political and business careers ended prematurely in 1864, when he lost the use of his legs.
Described by a fellow shipowner as being ‘a strange mixture of energy, industry, self-reliance, egotism and pretence’, Lindsay’s parliamentary career has arguably been overshadowed by his astonishing journey from cabin boy to ‘merchant prince’.
