A ‘small, meek-looking personage’, Raynham, heir to the marquessate of Townshend, was a well-meaning, indefatigable but often ineffective champion of humanitarian causes, chiefly prevention of cruelty to women and animals.
Returned unopposed in February 1856, Raynham promised a general support for Palmerston’s government and declared that he would use his position in Parliament to promote the improvement of education, and social conditions for the labouring classes.
After 1857 Raynham began to promote a variety of humanitarian causes, in particular protecting women from domestic abuse, preventing cruelty to animals and drawing attention to the condition of the metropolitan poor. He unsuccessfully proposed a select committee on aggravated assaults on women, 28 May 1857, which he argued had dramatically increased and were a ‘disgrace to the country’, existing legislation being in his view inadequate.
An active patron of the recently-founded Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA), in 1858 Raynham introduced a wide-ranging bill to impose fines for mistreatment of animals and the compulsory licensing and inspection of abattoirs.
None of Raynham’s bills became law before he succeeded to the peerage in September 1863, in part because of the climate of the time. For example, MPs received his 1857 prevention cruelty to animals bill with ‘inextinguishable mirth’, and parliamentary opinion generally thought the law on aggravated assaults was already sufficient unless it could be shown that the number had significantly increased.
In the Lords, Townshend ‘moved a bewildering array of bills, … all hopeless causes, most barmy, but a few sensible and prophetic’.
In 1872 Townshend’s wife absconded to France with Lord Edward Thynne, an old roué and former MP for Frome. Townshend gained revenge by horsewhipping Thynne in 1881, for which he was briefly imprisoned before he reluctantly paid the fine. This humiliation and his declining finances forced Townshend to live much of his last two decades in Paris. Townshend died in 1899, leaving a personalty of just £3,600, and the title and the family estates of Raynham Park, Norfolk and Balls Park, Hertfordshire, passed to his only son John James Dudley Stuart Townshend, 6th Marquess Townshend (1866-1921).
