Described by one contemporary as ‘a very intelligent gentleman’, but by the hostile Blackburn Standard as someone ‘whose aptitude for business is problematical, and whose intellectual resources are either doubtful or undeveloped’, Feilden followed in the footsteps of his father William to become MP for his native borough.
Feilden had become increasingly active in Blackburn’s public life in the 1840s. A magistrate since 1842, when he was assaulted while reading the Riot Act during Chartist disturbances, he quarrelled with fellow magistrates in 1849 when they decided that the bench should sit from 11 rather than 10 a.m., declaring brusquely that he would sit at any reasonable business hour.
One of Feilden’s detractors later claimed that it was ‘notorious’ that Feilden’s ‘sole purpose’ in establishing the Commercial Association had been to advance his claim to become Blackburn’s MP,
Declaring his opinions to be ‘moderate, and yet thoroughly Liberal’, and wishing to see ‘Reform, Retrenchment, Education and Free Trade’, Feilden endorsed the Aberdeen ministry, but promised to act independently.
The factory reformer Richard Oastler was said to have written in Feilden’s support in 1853, and it was thus fitting that his maiden speech was to second John Morgan Cobbett’s motion to bring in a bill to prevent evasion of the Ten Hours Act by stopping the motive power in factories between 5:30 p.m. and 6 a.m.
During the 1853 session Feilden was present for 93 of the 219 divisions in which he could possibly have voted.
Feilden did not seek re-election at the 1857 general election, having lost the confidence of Blackburn’s Liberals ‘because he devoted too much time to his duties as an officer in the militia, and too little to his parliamentary duties’.
Thereafter Feilden resumed his interests in Herm and Jethou, where he abandoned his ‘hare-brained scheme’ for a floating causeway between the islands, but invested in oyster beds and granite quarrying, neither of which paid off.
Feilden, who had latterly resided at The Chain, Ashton-on-Ribble, Lancashire, died in October 1898, leaving only a ‘nominal’ estate, and was buried alongside his first wife in Samlesbury churchyard.
