Taylor’s family had established itself at Bordesley, Warwickshire, in the early eighteenth century before his great-grandfather, John Taylor (1711-75), who had made his fortune ‘in the button trade’, opened a bank in Birmingham in 1765.
Taylor became a fellow commoner at Trinity College, Cambridge in October 1836 but did not graduate.
Holding ‘truly Conservative’ opinions, Taylor declared himself a ‘firm supporter of the constitution in Church and State’, and pledged ‘to do the best I can for the benefit of my Country’. He believed that ‘the present graduated system of duty’ on corn was preferable to ‘the fixed duty’ proposed by the government, which, he contended, would reduce the price of bread and create a depression in ‘the wages of the working classes’.
A silent member, Taylor did not sit on any select committees or introduce any bills, and was an infrequent attender. He did, however, vote on the amendment to the address, which put the Whigs out of office, 27 Aug. 1841. His outstanding characteristic as a representative was a determination to defend the agricultural interest. Although he supported Peel’s sliding scale on corn imports, 9 Mar. 1842, he had voted to reject an amendment critical of the corn laws, 16 Feb., and divided against abolition amendments on at least five occasions during 1842-5. He supported the reintroduction of income tax, 11, 13 Apr. 1842, but was absent from the second and third readings of the bill. With regard to the poor law, Taylor had called in 1841 for ‘the amelioration of the condition of the poor’, and voted with the minority to abolish the poor law commissioners and their assistant commissioners, 27 June, and exempt certain unions from the commission’s control, 19 July 1842. Regarding Ireland, however, Taylor views accorded with the majority of Conservatives and, reflecting perhaps his father’s subsequently expressed hope that ‘distress and famine’ might lead to the spread of ‘Protestant principles’ in Ireland, opposed Lord John Russell’s motion to consider the state of that country, 23 Feb. 1844.
Taylor supported the shortening of working hours under the factory bill, 18, 22 Mar. 1844, and voted against the clause which allowed children of eight years of age to work in factories, 6 May. He was, however, one of those who ‘absented themselves’ from the critical division on the ten hours clause, 13 May.
In the autumn of 1846 Taylor intimated that he was determined to retire at the next dissolution. Consequently, the interests of ‘the high Tory and Protectionist party’ were ‘summarily sacrificed’ by the East Worcestershire Conservative Association when an agreement was made with the Whigs to share the representation at the next general election.
In 1843 Taylor had married the daughter of an Essex squire, who had served as high sheriff of Northamptonshire in 1813.
