A Conservative landed gentlemen, Child was a devout churchman. A member of the National Club, he was a reliable and vocal supporter of ultra-Protestant causes. He declared that ‘it is of the utmost consequence to uphold the Protestant principles which are interwoven with our constitution and laws’.
Child succeeded to the family estate of Rownall Hall in his infancy. He was a rumoured protectionist candidate for North Staffordshire at the 1847 general election, but did not offer.
Child took his seat at Westminster in time to back the ecclesiastical titles bill, which he considered a necessary response to the turmoil caused by the Pope’s establishment of a Catholic hierarchy in England, 21 Mar. 1851.
In the ensuing parliament Child repeatedly cast votes against Jewish relief and in favour of Richard Spooner’s anti-Maynooth campaign. In the 1852-53 divisions on financial policy he backed the budget of Disraeli and opposed that of Gladstone. In the same session he expressed concern that the Canadian church should be treated in the same way as the ‘Church at home’ and opposed the use of church revenues and property for non-sacred duties, 11 Apr. 1853.
Although he voted in favour of Cobden’s Canton motion, 3 Mar. 1857, at the ensuing general election, Child denied that he had ‘any hostile feeling to the government’.
An active philanthropist, in 1867 Child established and endowed a hospital for children in north Staffordshire. He also founded art and language classes in Staffordshire connected with the pottery trade, and provided funds ‘for sending convalescents to the seaside, for nursing at poor homes, and for providing surgical appliances for poor people’.
