A country banker, Salt, a ‘moderate Conservative’ and party loyalist, contributed to a diverse range of debates in the first of his four spells in Parliament.
Salt was elected for his native town in 1859. Although a ‘Tory’, Hatherton conceded that ‘I never remember any other candidate with so legitimate a claim on that borough’.
Salt retired at the 1865 general election, but was re-elected for Stafford at a by-election in 1869, and served as parliamentary secretary to the local government board 1875-80. He was defeated at the 1880 general election, but had two further spells as MP for Stafford, from 1881-85 and 1886-92. In 1866 the Stafford branch of Stevenson, Salt and company was sold to Lloyds Bank, of which Salt became a director. The following year the London branch of the old family bank was amalgamated with Bosanquet and Company, which was also absorbed by Lloyds in 1884. In 1886 Salt became chairman of Lloyds Bank. Pursuing a strategy of expansion through buying up smaller, old private banks, under Salt’s stewardship Lloyds grew from 61 offices in 1886 to 257 in 1898, when he stepped down. In the same period the paid up capital increased from £1.1 million to £2.4 million and the total assets from £11 million to £40 million.
