An immensely rich Black Country ironmaster, Foster safeguarded the interests of his trade as MP for South Staffordshire in the 1850s and 1860s. A moderate Liberal, Foster ‘ranked among the dissentient Liberals who found their way into … the Cave of Adullam’ during the debates on reform in the mid-1860s. This contributed to his defeat in 1868, but ‘he had not, however, much liking for parliamentary life’.
Foster’s grandfather Henry (1743-1816) was married to the widow of Gabriel Bradley, whose son had founded an ironworks at Stourbridge. Foster’s father William (1784-1861) sold his share in John Bradley & Company to his brother James Foster (1786-1853) and half-brother John Bradley in 1813.
By the early 1860s, when the business was at its peak, the firm was the largest producer of wrought iron in the Black Country and among the major producers of pig iron, and its assets included five mines, two blast furnaces, seven forges and two foundries and engineering plants.
Foster was linked with the vacancy for South Staffordshire in 1853, but did not stand, leading his fellow ironmaster, William Mathews, to write critically:
Foster’s position in the staple trade of the district, with his large fortune, & no inconsiderable landed property would, as perfect these essentials, have made him a capital candidate but there his pretensions end – the requisite enlargement of head & heart are wanting & hence his refusal to put on his armour.
William Matthews to Lord Hatherton, Staffordshire Record Office, D260/M/7/5/27/26.
Foster did, however, second the successful Whig candidate at the 1853 South Staffordshire by-election.
In his first session, perhaps surprisingly in view of his later scepticism towards electoral reform, Foster backed the ballot and voiced support for the divorce and matrimonial causes bill, 18 Aug. 1857.
Foster backed the 1861 borough franchise bill, and the following year spoke in favour of simplifying the licensing laws to end the anomaly of ‘having four different licences’ for the sale of alcohol, 7 Apr. 1862.
Foster backed Kelly’s motion to prioritise the reduction and repeal of malt duty, 17 Apr. 1866. He supported the second reading of the Liberal government’s reform bill in the same session, opposing Grosvenor’s amendment for a parallel redistribution scheme, 27 Apr. 1866. However, in line with his earlier expressed views, he sided with other dissident Liberals and Conservatives in favour of Dunkellin’s amendment for a ratable instead of a rental franchise, which turned out Russell’s government, 18 June 1866. However, in the debates on the 1867 representation of the people bill he generally voted with the majority of Liberals in favour of a reduced residency qualification, enfranchising urban leaseholders and copyholders, and increasing the representation of the largest towns at the expense of the smallest boroughs.
In 1866-7 Foster served on the select committee that considered miners’ grievances. In the votes on the report, he generally took an employer’s view of the question. He supported a twelve hour day for those over the age of sixteen years and was in the majority that rejected measuring the work of miners by weight, subject to oversight by inspectors of weights and measures.
Foster’s wayward votes on reform led to his defeat for the new constituency of West Staffordshire at the 1868 general election and he did not seek a return to the House thereafter. In 1870 he bought the Apley Park estate in Shropshire from the Whitmore family for £507,000, which allowed him to return his heir William Henry Foster (1846-1924) for Bridgnorth, 1870-85.
