A mostly silent MP, whose spoken interventions were directed against the trading monopoly possessed by the Hudson’s Bay Company in north-western Canada, Christy (also known as Christie), was a Liberal Conservative. Christy’s grandfather, Miller Christy (1748-1820), of Stockwell, Surrey, had been a prosperous Quaker hat manufacturer.
At the 1847 general election Christy offered for Newcastle-under-Lyme, which had been represented by his cousin William Henry Miller (1789-1848), 1830-41. During the campaign Christy emphasised that ‘his family had for more than a century past held a considerable position in one of the staple trades of the borough’.
Christy generally voted with the Derbyites 1847-52, but supported the Peelites on a number of key votes. These included opposing Hume’s proposal to renew the income tax for only a year, 13 Mar. 1848, and supporting Hutt’s motion to suppress the slave trade using British ships, 19 Mar. 1850.
Christy’s political views were interpreted differently by contemporaries. Writing to William Gladstone, 4 Aug. 1852, Sir John Young classified Christy as one of the ‘Free Trade Derbyites’.
In the 1849, 1852-3 and 1856 sessions Christy voted in 35%, 26% and 30% of divisions respectively.
Christy was in the majority which defeated Palmerston’s second government on the conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858, and he supported Derby’s reform bill the following year before retiring at the subsequent general election. In 1862 he had succeeded two female cousins to Miller’s estates of Craigentinny, Edinburgh and Britwell Court, Kent, and taken the additional name of Miller.
