‘A hard-headed, self-made man’, Jackson was a Liberal businessman with extensive commercial and industrial interests.
political temperament was always controlled by common sense, and he was a thoroughly trusted party man. He did not often speak in Parliament, but when addressing the House was always, notwithstanding some provincialisms which he retained to the last, listened to with attention.
Minutes of proceedings, Institution of Civil Engineers (1876), xlv, pt. iii, 252-6 (at 256).
Although rarely vocal in the chamber, he was ‘always exceedingly useful on committees’.
Jackson’s father, a Warrington doctor, had died when he was six years old, after which his mother took the family to Liverpool, where Jackson was apprenticed to a merchant, before working in a counting-house.
He was essentially a producer. Safe income-yielding investments had no charm for him; as fast as he made money he put his earnings into something which would, in however small a degree, increase the wealth of the world.
In the early 1840s Jackson became an improvement commissioner at Birkenhead, Cheshire, and invested heavily in the town. He was part of the consortium that bought up land with a view to exploiting the peninsula’s natural harbour to construct docks. As the commission had the authority (by a local act) but not the funds to build a gas and water works, Jackson and his brother stepped in to construct them and supply the town. He also purchased the Woodside Ferry service that operated between Liverpool and Birkenhead, and later converted some of his property into Birkenhead Park. Most importantly, perhaps, Jackson was chairman of the Birkenhead and Chester Railway Company. (He also held numerous other railway directorships).
A staunch Liberal free trader, Jackson welcomed the repeal of the corn laws in 1846, predicting that the measure would be ‘of incalculable advantage to Birkenhead’.
In his first Parliament, Jackson’s votes followed a similar pattern to those of his friend Sir Joshua Walmsley, another former Liverpool merchant, and MP for Leicester, 1847-8, 1852-7, and Bolton 1849-52. Jackson supported Jewish relief, Joseph Hume’s ‘little Charter’ of political reforms, and the equalisation of the borough and county franchise. In 1849 he backed the repeal of the navigation laws at ‘every stage’ and was among the minority who endorsed Cobden’s motion for retrenchment, 26 Feb. 1849.
In his maiden speech, 22 Feb. 1848, which drew on his experience of west Africa, Jackson supported William Hutt’s motion for a select committee on the slave trade. Jackson argued that slavery was a ‘question of pounds, shillings and pence’.
In the 1850s Jackson, in partnership with Thomas Brassey, another Birkenhead investor, Samuel Morton Peto, Liberal MP for Norwich, 1847-54, Finsbury, 1859-65, and Bristol, 1865-8, and Edward Ladd Betts, became one of the great railway contractors of the age.
Perhaps as a consequence of his business commitments, Jackson was silent in the House for much of the mid-1850s. He opposed the motions criticising the conduct of the Crimean War by the Aberdeen coalition, and later Palmerston’s first ministry, moved by Roebuck and Disraeli, 29 Jan. 1855, 25 May 1855, 19 July 1855. He divided against Cobden’s Canton motion, 3 Mar. 1857, and had nothing but praise for Palmerston at the subsequent general election.
Despite his general silence in debate, Jackson remained an active committee man. Most important, perhaps, were the series of investigations into the system of contracts for public departments, notably the Weedon establishment which provided clothing for the Ordnance, which had been exposed as inefficient during the Crimean War. After two years of sitting on this committee, Jackson declared, 8 June 1858, ‘that in the whole of his business experience he [had] never had brought before him such a course of neglect, extravagance, and waste of public money’ as had occurred at Weedon.
would consist not of purely military men, but of accountants and men practically qualified for such an investigation. The question was entirely a mercantile one, and the Commission should number among its members men with mercantile minds.
Hansard, 28 June 1858, vol. 151, c. 585.
In the late 1850s Jackson became one of the directors of the company formed to back Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s leviathan steamship The Great Eastern.
At the 1865 general election Jackson retired from Newcastle-under-Lyme to stand for North Derbyshire. Through his friendship with the Stephenson family, railway engineers, he had become a partner and then the sole owner of the Clay Cross colliery and iron works in the county.
Jackson unsuccessfully contested the new constituency of North East Derbyshire at the 1868 general election, a loss compensated by Gladstone’s gift of a baronetcy in 1869. Thereafter Jackson’s health declined steeply and he died in 1876. His personalty was valued at £700,000, 23 Feb. 1876, but re-sworn as £350,000 in June 1878.
