A member of one of the most powerful dynasties in the north-east of England, Ridley brought to an end his family’s 89 year unbroken representation of Newcastle-upon-Tyne when, in 1836, he declined to offer for the vacancy created by the death of his father, Sir Matthew White Ridley, 3rd bt. In addition to possessing significant land in the city of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, the family owned 30,000 acres in Northumberland, and held valuable investments in the coal, glass and brewing industries.
Having managed Conservative involvement in Northumberland North’s elections since 1841, Ridley offered himself at the 1859 general election for the vacancy created by Lord Ossulston’s elevation to the peerage. The rural, northern division of his home county, known for its aristocratic domination, was a perfect fit for Ridley, especially as he was unlikely to be opposed.
An occasional attender, Ridley voted with the Conservatives on most major issues. He was especially loyal to Disraeli’s leadership, and in June 1861 he took the lead in inviting him to the Carlton Club for a dinner with other Conservative MPs, as a show of confidence in his role as party leader in the Commons.
In his first Parliament, Ridley made occasional and brief contributions to debate, mostly on matters directly affecting his county, but failed to ‘distinguish himself as a speaker’.
Ridley reserved his most colourful contributions for artistic matters, especially sculpture. He was fervently against further state grants for the erection of statues of former British sovereigns in Parliament, declaring that it was not the government’s responsibility to ‘give a helping hand to mediocre talent’ or fund ‘works which did not excite the sympathies of those who looked upon them’. He had little time for the statues of Fox, Pitt and Burke in St. Stephen’s Hall, thinking them ‘as bad statues as were ever perpetrated’. For Ridley, artists should be commissioned to sculpt ‘great incidents in our history, or noble passages in the poets’ that appealed to the ‘perceptions, the sensibilities, the sympathies, or the national feelings of those who beheld them’, 3 Apr. 1862. He was also an outspoken critic of the decision to appoint Sir Edwin Landseer to oversee the installation of Nelson’s lions in Trafalgar Square, dismissing Landseer as a painter, not a sculptor.
At the 1865 general election Ridley declared his support for the ‘dignified but conciliatory administration of foreign affairs’, restated his call for the efficiency of the army and navy, and was returned unopposed.
Ridley spoke more frequently in his second Parliament, devoting most of his attention to his twin interests of agriculture and art. He was a particularly stern critic of the Russell ministry’s handling of the cattle plague crisis, 6, 20 and 22 Feb. 1866. He sat on the 1866 select committee on the home and foreign trade in animals, where he was an assiduous questioner, and his expertise was further evident when he served on the select committees on the metropolitan foreign cattle market bill.
At the 1868 general election Ridley made way for his eldest son and namesake. Thereafter he devoted his energies to the management of his estates at Blagdon, and continued to hunt three days a week. He died suddenly and ‘somewhat unexpectedly’ at Blagdon Hall in September 1877.
