A wealthy London silk merchant, Eaton was a Conservative loyalist who followed Disraeli’s lead over parliamentary reform. He was regarded as the ‘best-dressed man’ in the House, with a ‘pleasant presence’ and ‘genial features’.
Eaton’s involvement in the silk trade, led him to organise and raise £3,000 to relieve distress in Coventry, a centre of that industry. Many in the city blamed the decline of the staple trade on the 1860 Anglo-French commercial treaty negotiated by Richard Cobden for allowing cheap French imported silks.
Eaton was re-elected in first place at the general election a month later, but faced criticism regarding his involvement in a local railway scheme. In 1863 a new line had been proposed that would connect Coventry with the Great Western and Midland Railways, and provide a second link to London. A bill was passed in 1865 and a resolution passed by a public meeting, chaired by the mayor, entrusted Eaton with raising the money to fund the scheme. However, there was no legal obligation for Eaton to do so, and the scheme failed to attract the necessary capital.
Eaton voted with the Conservative leadership and the Adullamites in all the key votes on the Liberal government’s 1866 reform bill, including in favour of Grosvenor’s amendment for a parallel redistribution scheme and Dunkellin’s amendment for a ratable rather than a rental borough franchise, 27 Apr., 18 June 1866. He divided against the ballot, 17 July 1866. Eaton’s voting behaviour followed a similar pattern in the divisions on the Conservative ministry’s 1867 representation of the people bill. Like most Conservative MPs he opposed the enfranchisement of compound ratepayers, lodgers and urban copyholders and leaseholders. He also voted against granting extra representation to the largest towns at the expense of the small boroughs and reducing the residency qualification.
Eaton opposed Gladstone’s Irish church resolutions, 3 Apr. 1868, and, in his only spoken contribution in this period, queried the accuracy of the board of trade’s statistics regarding the quantity of imported foreign ribbons, 29 June 1868.
His hustings protestations notwithstanding, Eaton reputedly spent £100,000 on purchasing the Coventry Park estate in 1871.
