A self-styled Middlesex gentleman, the Conservative Meller offered qualified support for the Derby ministry’s reform scheme, while opposing the disenfranchisement of small boroughs and ‘democracy’ more generally. He came from a family that had been resident in south London since the mid-eighteenth century. His father was a coach maker, part of the firm of Wyburn, Thomas and Meller, who were described as coachmakers to the Queen and the Dowager Queen in an 1841 directory.
In December 1860 Mellor came forward for a vacancy in his native borough of Southwark as a ‘Liberal Conservative’ standing on ‘the constitution of 1688’. He distanced himself from ‘Ultra-Toryism’ and the ‘Manchester school’ and sarcastically noted of John Bright and other Liberals that ‘the boasted friends of the people have ... done little for them’. Meller supported the spread of ‘sound education’ and was not against an extension of the franchise to those qualified by ‘intelligence and a share in the burdens of the state’. A Churchman, he opposed any endowment of the Roman Catholic church.
In his maiden speech condemning the Liberal government’s reform bill, 13 Mar. 1866, Meller argued that this measure was unnecessary, as the House of Commons dealt effectively with any grievances that came to its notice and a quarter of the working class possessed the franchise. He also criticised the lodger franchise as ‘a most democratic and revolutionary measure’ and defended small boroughs.
Meller was re-elected for Stafford at the 1868 general election, but unseated on petition for bribery in 1869 and did not seek a return to Parliament.
