Cochrane’s two years as Conservative MP for Ipswich proved merely a brief interlude in his distinguished naval career. His father, Admiral Hon. Sir Alexander Forrester Inglis Cochrane (1758-1832), a younger son of the eighth earl of Dundonald, had likewise enjoyed an illustrious naval career and dabbled in politics, serving as MP for Stirling Burghs, 1800-2, 1803-6. He had been governor of Guadeloupe, 1810-14, and acquired estates in Trinidad (where he owned slaves), Bermuda and Nova Scotia.
Born in Edinburgh, Cochrane enlisted in the navy at the age of seven on board his father’s ship the Thetis, and continued to serve under his father until 1805, joining expeditions against Quiberon, Belle Isle, Ferrol and Egypt, and serving on the Irish station. Paternal influence assisted his rapid promotion, reaching the rank of captain (of the Jason, stationed in the West Indies) at the age of 17, but this was accompanied by charges of nepotism and ‘gross jobbery’.
Cochrane, who had been knighted in 1812, was appointed governor of Newfoundland in 1825, at a salary of £4,200 (retrenched to £3,000 in 1828).
Although he had strongly advised against the establishment of representative government in the colony, Cochrane nonetheless oversaw the creation of a new assembly and executive council in 1832. However, there were subsequently ‘constant, violent and even undignified’ quarrels between these two bodies, and the assembly and Cochrane.
Shortly after arriving back in England in December 1834 Cochrane accepted a requisition to offer as the Conservative candidate for Westminster, a seat previously held by his first cousin.
Cochrane’s first hustings experience was a turbulent one: he was hit repeatedly by missiles and ‘struck severely on the eye with a cabbage-stump’.
In July 1839 Cochrane offered as the Conservative for a vacancy at Ipswich, challenging the incumbent Thomas Milner Gibson, who had resigned to seek re-election as a Liberal following his conversion to free trade. Cochrane had previously been approached as a successor to Gibson, but had not wished to bind himself to the constituency, and he initially declined to contest the by-election, preferring to wait for the dissolution rather than fund two contests. However, he was persuaded to stand by Ipswich’s other Conservative MP, Fitzroy Kelly, who promised that Cochrane’s share of expenses would not exceed a certain sum.
An infrequent attender, Cochrane generally voted with the Conservatives, supporting motions of no confidence in ministers, 31 Jan. 1840, 4 June 1841. He served on the select committee on the West India mails, which declined to endorse the admiralty’s preference for Dartmouth as the port of arrival and departure.
Meanwhile Cochrane had in September 1840 informed Ipswich’s Conservatives that he would not offer again, due to their excessive financial demands. Despite Kelly’s assurances that his election expenses would not exceed a certain sum – which Cochrane had paid up front, together with an additional sum after the contest – he was shocked to be asked for a further £2,000, of which Kelly offered to pay half, urging Cochrane that their seats would otherwise be unsafe. Cochrane demurred, but received another request for £500 in February 1840. He was prepared to pay this if assured of future support, but when it transpired that this would not be forthcoming unless he also paid the earlier demand, he severed his connection with the local party.
At the dissolution in 1841 Cochrane instead sought election at Greenock, citing his support for ‘our glorious constitution’.
That September Cochrane applied to Peel for official employment, declaring that he was open to contesting any vacancy if given an admiralty or ordnance appointment which required him to sit in the House. He cited his ‘strenuous and constant exertions’ for the Conservative cause, both in his own contests and in his eldest son Alexander’s costly efforts to secure a seat at Bridport, but nonetheless received a polite rebuff.
Cochrane served as commander-in-chief at Portsmouth, 1852-5, overseeing much of the naval preparations for the Crimean war.
Having been in ‘an exceedingly feeble state for some months’, Cochrane died at Quarr Abbey House in October 1872,
