The adored and dutiful only child of one of the most wealthy cotton entrepeneurs of the industrial revolution, the ‘unofficial Member for Manchester’ in the unreformed House Sir George Philips, Philips had sat as a paying guest for a rotten borough prior to its abolition by the 1832 Reform Act, of which his family were firm supporters.
Philips continued to nurture the borough, however, and at the unanticipated election of 1835 topped the poll, having promised to support a ‘temperate’ reform of the established church, the admission of Dissenters to universities (except as fellows), and to give the incoming Peel ministry a fair trial, although he would ‘watch with a jealous eye the men who opposed the reform bill’.
Although it is generally accepted that Philips spoke only twice during his 32 year stint in the Commons, it is possible that alongside his two known speeches in the unreformed House, some of those attributed to his father between 1818-30, and his distant cousin Mark Philips from 1835-47, were also his.
At that year’s general election Philips abandoned Kidderminster and came forward as a second Liberal for the venal borough of Poole, where both the sitting Members had vacated. After a fierce contest against two Conservative baronets he was narrowly returned in second place, amidst allegations of wholesale bribery and intimidation by his agents. Attempts to unseat him for corruption, however, came to nothing and he remained at Poole for the rest of his career, evidently assisted by deep pockets.
Unlike his father, whom he had succeeded in 1847, Philips shunned involvement with the family’s business affairs, but drawing an income sufficient ‘to procure every enjoyment a rational man and a gentleman can desire’, as he put it, devoted himself to those ‘liberal pursuits which occupy my mind and never allow me a moment’s ennui’.
