The Fenton family had resided near Rochdale for centuries, ‘most of them humble tillers of the soil’.
‘Rather above the middle height, and a fine hale-looking man’, Fenton ‘had a habit of carrying gingerbread in his pocket, which he munched frequently at odd times’.
Fenton, who once admitted on the hustings that he was ‘not gifted with eloquence’, is not known to have spoken in debate.
Fenton returned to Parliament at the April 1837 by-election following Entwisle’s death. Seconding his nomination, John Bright urged Rochdale’s electors to remember Fenton’s previous parliamentary service, and Fenton emphasised that ‘he was no suckling, but a man of experience and knowledge’. Although he was heckled on the subject of the Poor Law, Fenton argued that he had not voted for the third reading, had resisted its more obnoxious provisions in committee, and opposed its application to manufacturing districts.
Fenton’s second period in the Commons was characterised by lax attendance, being one of the least assiduous Lancashire MPs. He voted in 37 out of 293 divisions (13%) in 1838, and 48 out of 250 (19%) in 1839.
Although Fenton’s obituary ascribed his retirement to ‘infirm health and other causes’, the Manchester Times in 1843 attributed it to his ‘love for private life and domestic enjoyment’.
Aside from donations to the Anti-Corn Law League, Fenton does not appear to have been politically active following his retirement, although he signed a Lancashire millowners’ memorial against the ten hours bill in 1847.
Fenton died in 1863, and was buried at Bamford Chapel. He is commemorated with a bust in Rochdale town hall, presented by his widow in 1872.
