Hallewell’s political career demonstrates that men of relatively modest means could exert political influence in more than one region of the United Kingdom. A Yorkshireman by birth, Hallewell developed his political skills as a local Conservative politician in the Cotswolds before seizing an opportunity to secure a parliamentary seat in south Ulster. His career as an MP was, however, very brief, and in spite of fighting three elections, he spent little more than a year in Parliament.
Hallewell was born at Boroughbridge, Yorkshire, the son of the vicar of Nidd and curate of Farnham, near Knaresborough.
Hallewell became a widower in 1847, and his youngest daughter died the following year. He was opposed to what he regarded as Britain’s unreciprocated system of free trade and in 1847 he published a long series of letters on various questions of social and political economy in the Gloucestershire Chronicle and other newspapers, under the signature of ‘A True Conservative’.
Hallewell is not known to have sat on any select committees or introduced any bills, but was a regular attender and appears to have been among the staunchest of Conservatives. According to his backers, he sought ‘a return to a system of moderate protection to all branches of native industry’, and voted in favour of a partial repeal of the malt tax, 17 June 1851. A member of the established church, he had informed his constituents that he would never consent to ‘any foreign potentate’ having any communication with the ‘civil or religious establishments’ of the United Kingdom without the ‘approbation of the Queen and her government’. He therefore joined the minority in favour of Sir Robert Inglis’s amendment to the ecclesiastical titles bill, denying rank or precedence to any representative of the Catholic Church, 20 June.
Hallewell is known to have spoken only once in the Commons in March 1852, when he endorsed the proposed inquiry into outrages in Ireland, a question that he felt not only affected ‘the moral and material improvement’ of that country, but also ‘its character as a civilised community’, observing that ‘unless the law became a terror to evil-doers they would become a terror to society’.
Hallewell came forward again at Newry at the 1852 general election, and in a long and closely argued address he qualified his support for the ecclesiastical titles bill by arguing that because it had been badly framed, the measure had caused unnecessary irritation to Catholics. At the same time he declared that he was still prepared to back an inquiry into Maynooth College, and in a subsequent speech made clear his hostility to the admission of Jews to Parliament. Although he was presented as ‘practically devoted’ to the interests of the town, and was credited with having induced the government to reduce the rate of interest on its loan to the Newry Navigation, he was narrowly defeated by a local Presbyterian Liberal.
Returning to Gloucestershire, he remarried in July 1855 and in November 1856 contested his local borough of Cheltenham as a staunch Conservative, albeit one who ‘adhered to the rule of independence’.
Hallewell does not appear to have sought another parliamentary seat, but was for 50 years an active county magistrate and maintained his banking interests in Gloucestershire. He died at his residence, Beauchamp Lodge, near Gloucester in November 1881, when his personal estate was sworn at £9,205 (re-sworn at £8,526 in June 1882). He was succeeded by his third son, John Hallewell of Chesterfield,
