‘A real good old Tory of the old school’, Treherne was a ‘fine old English gentleman’.
The second son of Rees Goring Thomas, a Carmarthenshire squire, Morgan Thomas (as he was originally known) had qualified as a barrister in 1827. However, he never practised as he inherited a ‘considerable fortune’ from both his father and uncle in the 1820s, and he acquired Gate House in Sussex through his marriage to an heiress in 1835.
The poor health of his wife prompted Thomas to take his family to live in Florence from 1840 to 1846. He was a ‘man of strict integrity, scrupulous to a fault in everything affecting his reputation’ and that of his family.
Thomas had long claimed an ‘illustrious genealogy’ apparently dating back to the Plantagenets and Hywel Dda, an ancient Welsh king.
Treherne finally succeeded in being elected as MP for Coventry at the 1863 by-election. ‘A Tory to the backbone’, his hostility to the 1860 Anglo-French commercial treaty that had been negotiated by Richard Cobden was popular with local ribbon weavers who blamed cheap French imports for their distress.
Treherne lent credence to such attacks in his maiden speech on Locke King’s county franchise bill, 13 Apr. 1864. During a decade when some Conservatives were re-branding themselves as Liberal Conservatives for electoral purposes, Treherne defiantly declared that ‘he had been returned to that House as a Tory’. He sought to rescue the label from being a term of abuse employed by Liberals. For Treherne, ‘a Tory was a gentleman of independent means, of independent mind, who would speak the truth, and would not be deterred by the laughter of one party or the frowns of another’. He opposed the bill on the ground that there should be a ‘comprehensive’ measure to settle the issue rather than piecemeal bills. He later voted against the borough franchise bill and the secret ballot, 11 May, 21 June 1864.
Treherne drew attention to the distress of Coventry’s staple trade, 30 June 1864. The 1860 treaty meant that French silks were freely admitted, but that British silks paid a duty of 7.5% to get into the French market. Appealing to the English sense of fair play, he called for the government to pressure the French authorities into ensuring a level playing field. He returned to the issue, 16 Mar. 1865, noting that the state of the Coventry riband trade was ‘most deplorable’, and again complained that the ‘French had a virtual monopoly in their own market’, despite the lowering of the duty on British silks to 3.5%. He protested against the ‘one-sided’ and ‘unfeeling’ reports of the poor law inspectorate which implied that there was still full employment in the city. On both occasions, Thomas Milner Gibson, the president of the board of trade, was unreceptive to Treherne’s arguments, unsurprisingly given that he had been a member of the Anti-Corn Law League and remained a staunch free trader. Milner Gibson denied that the French duty on British silks was large and contended that other factors, such as changing fashions, were the causes of the trade’s recession. He ruled out any legislative remedy for the distress.
Treherne was re-elected in second place at the 1865 general election, but appears to have played no further part in the division lobby or in the chamber. His daughter, from whom Treherene was later estranged, subsequently recalled how her father had been disillusioned by his experience of the House:
Once in Parliament, my father, although cranky, soon found out that “love of your country” meant “love of good places”, and that “party spirit” was everything … He who had been so enthusiastic for … politics all his life gave it all up. Had he but known, he said, he would never have troubled himself about them.
Weldon, My orphanage, 20.
However, elsewhere his daughter wrote that Treherne was gripped by insanity in his later years.
Notwithstanding his disappointments with parliamentary life, Treherne represented Coventry until his death in July 1867. He left a personal estate sworn under £30,000 and was succeeded by his eldest son Morgan Dalrymple Thomas Treherne (1836-1908).
