‘A man of action’, Melly, a Liverpool merchant prince from a Unitarian family, was an advanced Liberal, who took a keen interest in all measures to promote education and social improvement.
Perhaps of Swiss origin, Melly’s family had come to prominence after his father, Andrew, founded a merchant house in Liverpool in the early nineteenth century. Andrew Melly married into the Unitarian Greg family, cotton manufacturers, of Quarry Bank House, Cheshire, and Robert Hyde Greg, MP for Manchester 1839-41, was George Melly’s uncle.
Melly’s first experience of business was in a London firm ‘of the highest standing’, but after the death of his father in 1853 he became a partner in the family concern of Melly, Romilly and Company.
In his entertaining memoirs, Melly recalled that in 1859 he was offered an Irish borough by the Liberal whip Sir William Hayter, ‘who suddenly ordered me to give him a cheque for £2,000, leave London that night, cross to Ireland, and … [go] to an obscure little fishing town in the South-West’.
Although Melly was a staunch supporter of William Gladstone, he later admitted that when he entered the Commons Benjamin Disraeli was ‘certainly the most interesting and impressive figure’.
In the House of Commons I only made three or four speeches of importance, i.e. lasting over an hour. What the House … liked in my day was a sharp ten or twenty minutes, with a good story and some facts or figures which it had not heard before.
The Times, 29 Sept. 1894; Melly, Recollections, 63.
His maiden speech, 18 Mar. 1868, in favour of a bill restricting the sale of alcohol on Sundays, included a jab at the renegade Liberal John Arthur Roebuck.
Melly was re-elected for Stoke in 1868 and 1874.
I hope it will be only temporary, but even for a time your high spirit and intelligence, your activity and liberal patriotism will be much missed from the benches of the House.
Ibid., 31.
Melly supported Gladstone over Home Rule in 1886, and remained active in Liberal causes.
Melly died in 1894, a year after his Recollections of sixty years was published. His sons followed him into business, with his eldest George Henry Melly (1860-1927), possessing shipping and insurance interests.
