Waring, ‘a hard-headed businessman’ of ‘phenomenal energy’, was the ‘life and soul’ of Waring Brothers, a leading firm of building contractors responsible for some of the largest civil engineering projects of the Victorian period, including London’s St. Pancras station and numerous railways, both at home and abroad.
Waring’s father, a contemporary of George Stephenson, was a successful builder and later a railway contractor, who around 1820 purchased Haworth Hall, the principal seat in Brinsworth, near Rotherham.
Waring’s work at home was less conspicuous, but included sections of the Midland Railway and Kensington Railway, parts of the London underground, as well as the Dorset Central line (1858), whose directors included the MP for Poole Henry Danby Seymour and Sir Ivor Guest of Canford, one of Poole’s leading proprietors.
A man about town, living in The Albany, as generous and eclectic in his bachelor hospitalities as, after his marriage, in the cosmopolitan banquets, which during the eighties gave his house, 3 Grosvenor Square, a place of its own in the chronicle of the London season.
Escott, Trollope, 174.
At the 1865 general election Waring duly offered for Poole alongside Seymour, as a supporter of Lord Palmerston. After a contest against a Conservative, who accused him of siphoning off money from railway contracts, he was returned in second place with a comfortable margin.
At the 1868 general election Waring offered again for Poole, which had been reduced to a single member by the 1867 Reform Act. Now opposed by the Canford interest, which had rallied behind a Conservative family candidate, and accused of ‘swindling’ by a hostile local paper, which incorrectly cited The Times as its source, he was defeated.
At that year’s general election Waring, with his line nearing completion, ‘carried Poole by storm’ against his former rival, only to be unseated on petition a few months later for treating carried out by his agents.
Waring, a noted art collector and contributor to various journals, including Vanity Fair and the Fortnightly Review, which he considered purchasing in the 1880s, wrote a number of notable works on railways.
