A Shetlander of humble origins, Anderson was the co-founder and managing director of the mighty Peninsular & Orient (P & O) Steam Navigation Company. A Liberal free trader, during his brief spell in Parliament Anderson sought to promote the economic development of his native islands and regularly contributed to shipping debates.
Anderson was employed from the age of ten, initially as a beach boy ‘scrubbing and washing fish’.
Anderson and Willcox pioneered the use of steamships, won a succession of government postal contracts and founded the Peninsular & Orient Steam Navigation Company in 1840.
Anderson sought to promote the economic development of his native islands. He founded the Shetland Journal in June 1836, although the lack of facilities meant that it had to be printed in London.
Anderson’s popularity, philanthropy and commercial influence secured his election as a Liberal in 1847 for Orkney and Shetland, defeating the interest of the Whig Dundas family, earls of Zetland, who had long dominated the constituency.
Anderson took a natural interest in shipping questions, and with Willcox, Liberal MP for Southampton 1847-62, vigorously promoted the interests of P & O, including defending the system of government postal subsidies from which the company derived much of its revenue.
Although by the late 1840s he had wound up the Fishery Company and discontinued his newspaper, Anderson continued to press for improvements which would benefit his constituency.
In his last decades Anderson devoted himself to philanthropy, founding schools in Southampton and Lerwick and a working man’s institute in Norwood.
