An ‘able representative of advanced liberalism on its more thoughtful, and cultivated side’, Fox entered the Commons aged 61, and although he served as Oldham’s MP for 15 years, he undoubtedly made less impact in Parliament than he would have done as a younger (and healthier) man.
The son of a Suffolk farmer (and grandson to the village barber), Fox moved around 1788 to Norwich, where his father worked in turn as a shopkeeper, handloom weaver (assisted by Fox, who was also an errand boy) and teacher at St. George’s chapel school, where Fox received a ‘limited and imperfect education’.
Fox became estranged from his wife in 1834, setting up home with Eliza Flower (daughter of the radical printer, Benjamin Flower), ‘though Fox maintained that the relationship was never more than platonic’. This scandal – compounded by Fox’s pronouncements on marriage and divorce
Having championed full civil rights for Dissenters and participated in the reform agitation, Fox joined the London Working Men’s Association, but he repudiated ‘physical force’ Chartism, and his sympathies waned when the Chartists began to disrupt Anti-Corn Law League meetings.
Divisions among Oldham’s radicals meant that Fox was among three potential running-mates for John Feilden under discussion in 1846,
His fellow Unitarian MP John Bowring recalled that
much curiosity was exhibited in the House... when William Johnson Fox first took his place – a place which he ever after occupied – on one of the back seats of the House… The first impression made was not fascinating. He looked a short, fat, jolly, country bumpkin, with black hair hanging over his shoulders – it grew white from age – and with a somewhat ungainly gait; but if you caught his eye, it was full of intellectual fire, and his countenance was marked with the impress of philosophic thought.
Bowring, ‘Review’, 444-6.
A less kind observer described Fox as ‘very short, very fat, and quite round… The character of his locomotion… is a sort of compromise between a waddle and a roll’.
Fox’s attendance in his first Parliament fluctuated according to his health. In the 1848 session he voted in 57% of divisions, making him the sixth most assiduous Lancashire MP.
In keeping with his views on the separation of church and state, Fox brought in a bill for secular education in England and Wales, 26 Feb. 1850, which proposed to establish secular schools funded from local rates, with separate religious instruction as parents wished.
A supporter of advocated extensive parliamentary reform, Fox spoke at length in support of Joseph Hume’s ‘Little Charter’, 20 June 1848, and routinely divided for the ballot, franchise extension and shorter parliaments. He was one of only 13 MPs to support Feargus O’Connor’s motion on the Charter, 3 July 1849. He joined the National Parliamentary Reform Association later that year.
Fox failed to secure re-election in 1852, when Oldham experienced another disorderly contest.
Fox returned to the Commons in time to vote in the division which brought down Derby’s ministry, 16 Dec. 1852, and attended fairly regularly for the rest of the session.
Fox’s views on foreign policy changed substantially during this Parliament. In 1855 he advised his constituents that while he had previously decried the miseries of war, he supported the Crimean conflict as ‘a defensive war against aggression’, and attacked the peace party.
This vote was seen as one reason for Fox’s defeat at the 1857 election, when Oldham’s Liberals were again divided.
Fox topped the poll at the 1859 election, and subsequently told his constituents that he considered Russell’s reform bill an acceptable instalment on the way to the Charter, unlike Derby’s ‘late sham bill’.
Reconciled to his wife some time after Eliza Flower’s death in 1846, Fox died of inflammation of the bladder in June 1864, after a short illness, and was buried at Brompton cemetery, with Cobden among those attending his funeral.
