Described by Disraeli as ‘a man of the people’, Barrow’s remarkable victory at the 1851 Nottinghamshire South by-election set the tone for a lengthy parliamentary career in which he consistently championed the tenant farmer and sought reform of the criminal justice system.
In February 1851 Barrow came forward as a protectionist for the vacancy at Nottinghamshire South caused by the death of the sitting member. His opponent, viscount Newark, was heir to a major magnate, and was backed by all but one of the region’s leading landowners.
The fact of his standing in the House of Commons at that moment was the best possible proof of the absence of intimidation.
Hansard, 30 Mar. 1852, vol. 120, c. 416.
In a later debate on free trade, he informed John Bright that:
He (Barrow) was not returned by the overwhelming power of great landowners to aid in keeping up their rents, but because he was known to have a strong opinion as to the injuries inflicted on the farming class.
Hansard, 25 Nov. 1852, vol. 123, c. 528.
Re-elected without opposition at the 1852 general election, Barrow, while acknowledging that his political principles aligned with the Derby ministry, insisted that he would not ‘offer any blind or slavish adherence to any leader’ and declared himself an ‘independent county member’.
In the Commons, Barrow spoke regularly on a range of issues, though his strongest interventions came in debates on agriculture and the criminal justice system. It was later noted that ‘though he never aspired to the rank of a first-class orator, his enunciations were always sound and to the point’.
At the 1857 general election Barrow explained that he had voted for Cobden’s censure motion on Canton because commerce could not be carried out ‘at the point of the bayonet’. He also spoke of his interest in reforming the diets of prisoners and insisted that if crime was to be diminished by education, it must be based on religion.
Barrow backed the Derby ministry’s defeated reform bill, 31 Mar. 1859, and, following his unopposed return at the subsequent general election, insisted that he would vehemently oppose any extension of the county franchise that would swamp the forty shilling freeholders.
Re-elected without opposition at the 1865 general election, Barrow reiterated his claim to be ‘an independent representative’, declaring that ‘measures, not men, would be the guide of my conduct’. He called for the abolition of the malt tax but was noticeably ambiguous on the subject of reform, stating that ‘I do not like change of its own sake’, but arguing that ‘I do not think that any class of the community should have privileges accorded to them which another class do not possess’.
Throughout his parliamentary career, Barrow devoted a great portion of his speeches to championing the tenant farmer and, more generally, the political rights of the poor. For example, he had pressed for the continuation of paying for the conveyance of voters to the poll because while ‘it was all very well for rich farmers, who might have friends to give them dinners after they had gone to the poll, it was not so with the poorer class of constituents’, 10 July 1854. However, he had little time for trade unions, and spoke out against the associations of workmen bill, 8 Feb. 1867, 10 Apr. 1867.
At the age of eighty-four, Barrow was re-elected as Conservative member for Nottinghamshire South in 1868, and sat until his retirement at the 1874 dissolution, by when he was the oldest member of the Commons.
