One of ‘the oldest families in Worcestershire’, the Dowdeswells had represented Tewkesbury since the mid-seventeenth century, Dowdeswell’s father sitting for the borough from 1835-47.
At his election Dowdeswell had declared that although he was an ‘ardent supporter of the Church of England’, he would accept ‘any well-digested measure’ for the reform of church rates. He nevertheless opposed the second reading of the church rates abolition bill, 7 Mar. 1866. Soon afterwards, at the urging of his party, he resigned his seat at Tewkesbury to contest the West Worcestershire seat made vacant by the death of the earl of Beauchamp.
Like his father, Dowdeswell appears to have been a silent member who did not introduce any bills. He served on a committee on Scottish railway bills in May 1866 and sat on one private bill committee in 1867.
Dowdeswell had been presented to electors as ‘the friend to the poor’ and, being a generous donor to the restoration of Tewkesbury Abbey, was said to have been ‘exceedingly popular among all classes’.
Dowdeswell took the Chiltern Hundreds in June 1876 on grounds of ill health and succeeded to his father’s 4,000 acre estate in Worcestershire in 1887.
