Blackburn’s most influential landowner, Feilden was often rumoured as a candidate for his native borough, but did not offer until 1865, when he was elected as Conservative MP at the advanced age of 73. ‘Owd Joe’, as he was affectionately known locally, was said to have ‘been improved ten years by his return’.
The Feildens had settled in the Blackburn area in the sixteenth century, and Feilden’s great-grandfather Henry (d. 1742) had purchased half of the manor of Blackburn together with two others in 1721, subsequently acquiring full control of this share.
Aside from the cotton manufacturers who generated the town’s wealth, Feilden’s landholdings meant that he, more than any other individual, was responsible for shaping the physical environment of nineteenth-century Blackburn. He was a generous benefactor to many local institutions, particularly those connected with the Anglican church, donating not only the land but also thousands of pounds for the building of churches, parsonages, and Sunday and day schools throughout this period.
In addition to gifts of land for religious and educational purposes, Feilden sold land at favourable rates for the construction of civic institutions, including a market hall (1848), town hall (1852), extended marketplace (1853), cottage gardens (1854), public park (1855) and workhouse (1858).
Feilden was involved with Blackburn’s elections from its enfranchisement in 1832. A later account recorded that he issued an address that year in the Whig interest, but withdrew and nominated his uncle, William Feilden, who was returned as a Whig, but soon joined the Conservatives.
When a vacancy occurred in March 1853, Feilden apparently ‘almost consented to [stand] but the doctor frightened him out of it by telling him that he could not live very many years’.
Feilden was finally persuaded to offer in 1865, after the appearance of a second Liberal candidate, John Potter, put paid to hopes that the incumbent MPs, the Conservative William Henry Hornby and the Liberal James Pilkington, would be re-elected unopposed. It had initially been rumoured that one of his sons would be approached, but instead they campaigned on their father’s behalf, assuring voters that ‘there is life in the old boy yet’.
Feilden’s age had prompted doubts about whether parliamentary life would prove too arduous, but Hornby subsequently testified to his colleague’s diligent attendance, observing that ‘I never went to the House… without finding him there, and he always sat me out every night, and he voted oftener than I did’. Feilden concurred with Hornby’s verdict that it had improved his health ‘very much and benefitted his constitution’.
Feilden claimed that ‘if he had consulted his own feelings he would have retired’ at the 1868 election, but he was persuaded to offer again, and he and Hornby were re-elected with a decisive majority.
