Aglionby, who was regarded as ‘one of the few men who are in advance of the party with whom they generally act’, described himself as a ‘Radical’, believing that ‘the principle of Radicalism was not to destroy, but to amend the institutions, so that they should become a blessing instead of a curse to the people’.
Aglionby was the only son of the Reverend Samuel Bateman, rector of Farthingstone, Northamptonshire. Following the death without issue of his maternal uncle, Christopher Aglionby, the family’s Cumbrian estates were partitioned among Christopher’s four sisters, and in 1813 Henry assumed the name of Aglionby in lieu of Bateman, in compliance with the will of his aunt, Elizabeth Aglionby.
Refusing to canvass ‘on principle’, Aglionby was returned ‘independently’ in second place for Cockermouth at the 1832 general election.
Aglionby was initially ‘considered somewhat a tedious speaker’ but ‘in the course of a session or two ... after he had flung aside the tendency to diffusiveness which he had acquired at the bar’, he ‘mastered the knack of parliamentary speaking’ and ‘won a position of considerable influence’.
At the 1835 general election Aglionby further explained his stance on canvassing:
He ... had never solicited any man for his vote – never had a paid agent. ... He wanted the electors to be unbiased – to think and to act for themselves. ... He hoped no elector would think himself neglected because he had not called upon him – because he had treated him as a man, not a child.
Carlisle Journal, 10 Jan. 1835.
He was equally insistent that he offered ‘independently’, and ‘acted on the principle of measures, not men, and it was therefore of little importance to him individually who were the ministers’.
It was on the issue of criminal justice that Aglionby made his first significant mark in the Commons. In April 1836 he successfully introduced a bill to repeal parts of the 1828 Offences of the Person Act (10 Geo. 4. c. 34) which made it obligatory for judges to order the execution of murderers to be carried out forty-eight hours after conviction. Believing that ‘where the criminal law had received some mitigation, the number of commitments and convictions had declined’, he proposed that the period between sentence and execution should be lengthened to between 14 and 27 days.
At the 1837 general election he reiterated his independent stance, insisting that ‘he stood there as he always had, for himself alone’, and topped the poll.
Re-elected in first place at the 1841 general election, Aglionby defended his support for the Poor Law Amendment Act and called for a fixed duty on corn.
During Peel’s second ministry Aglionby obstinately defended the New Zealand Company, of which he had been a director ‘with a small pecuniary interest in it’ since 1840. Following the Wairau incident in June 1843, when 22 Europeans and four Maori were killed when an armed party of New Zealand Company settlers and Ngati Toa clashed over the purchase of land, the financial position of the company had been steadily deteriorating, and the situation was brought to a head in 1844 when the colonial office withdrew an advance of £40,000 to the company after it discovered it was already owed money. In April 1844 the company’s directors suspended their operations and applied to Parliament ‘to redress the wrongs inflicted on the company’.
Although the select committee, on which Aglionby sat, condemned the New Zealand Company for sending settlers to the islands in defiance of the crown, it criticised the Treaty of Waitangi as ‘part of a series of injudicious proceedings’ between the British government and the Maori, and reported that the New Zealand Company had the right to the land ‘without reference to the validity or otherwise of its supposed purchase from the Natives’.
Undeterred, Aglionby, alongside his fellow New Zealand Company MP Charles Buller and the leading colonial promoter Edward Gibbon Wakefield, continued to put ‘unremitting pressure on the government’, whom they blamed for its troubles.
Returned unopposed in 1847 and re-elected in second place in 1852, Aglionby attended steadily and supported Russell’s ministry on most major issues.
Aglionby maintained his desire to reform the criminal justice system until the end of his life. In April 1854 he introduced the larceny bill, which sought to enable magistrates sitting in petty sessions to take the pleas of prisoners pleading guilty, 4 Apr. 1854. The bill, whose object, according to Aglionby, was ‘to rescue youthful offenders from the contamination to which they were exposed in the weeks and months which they were not unfrequently [sic] obliged to pass in gaol between their committal and their trial’, 8 June 1845, was part of the wider 19th-century trend of increasing the use of magistrates’ courts in the criminal justice system.
Aglionby, who had been suffering from ill health during his last parliamentary session, died without issue at his residence in Caterham, Surrey, in July 1854.
[M]ost diligent in the performance of his duties on committees – was well versed in the forms of the House – and his bonhomie and frank generous disposition rendered him a general favourite. ... [O]f late years, there have been few members whose opinions were received with more respect.
Carlisle Journal, 4 Aug. 1854.
