Known for his ‘genial and popular personality’, Houldsworth, who represented Nottinghamshire North in the Conservative interest for two decades, was a self-made entrepreneur.
Houldsworth was first returned to Parliament in 1818 as member for Pontefract and gave steady, though independent support to Liverpool’s ministry. In 1830 he retired from Pontefract to come in for Newton, allegedly given the seat in compensation by one of his debtors, Thomas Legh of Lyme, Cheshire, who owned most of the property in the borough. He was a consistent opponent of the Grey ministry’s reform bill.
With Newton disfranchised by the Reform Act, Houldsworth offered for his native North Nottinghamshire at the 1832 general election. Although he came forward as a Conservative, his candidature caused some discomfort to the fourth duke of Newcastle, one of the county’s dominant landowners, who commented that:
He is a loyal and sound man, but as a fit representative of the landed interest, it is not a little burlesque [that] not many years ago he was a common thread spinner at Nottingham. Now certainly he is a most wealthy man possessing probably £30,000 a year or even more – all made by spinning which he carries forward to a great extent at where he lives (Manchester), but yet representing a part of Notts! What a change in affairs! Where are the gentry and where are their means?
Unhappy reactionary: the diaries of the fourth duke of Newcastle-under-Lyne, 1822-1850 (2003), ed. R.A. Gaunt, 46-7.
Riding to the nomination on one of his own horses and sporting a ‘curly brimmed beaver’, Houldsworth’s presence appeared to irk some of the division’s non-electors, and on polling day his supporters were violently attacked.
Houldsworth’s dedication to his business interests and his penchant for the turf resulted in a notably lacklustre parliamentary career. He rarely spoke and, despite his undoubted expertise on manufacturing issues, he is not known to have served on any select committees. His poor attendance in the 1833 and 1834 sessions made it difficult to discern his precise political loyalties, though he voted for currency reform, 24 Apr. 1833, and Althorp’s motion to replace church rates with a land tax, 21 Apr. 1834.
At the 1835 general election he declared that he would give Peel’s ministry ‘a fair trial’, though he warned that ‘if they do not please me, I will not support them’.
He was again re-elected without opposition in 1837, but rarely attended in the following years, instead focusing on his commercial concerns which now included a cotton mill at Rocester, Staffordshire, and the Coltness iron works, which he established in 1837.
At the 1841 general election, when he was returned unopposed, Houldsworth spoke out against a fixed duty on corn, arguing that it would seriously injure agricultural interests and be of little use to manufacturers.
On the 1844 factory bill, Houldsworth voted in the minority with Peel for a maximum twelve, rather than ten, hour day for young children and women, 22 Mar. 1844. He was, though, generally supportive of state regulation of factories, and opposed Roebuck’s motion against legislative interference in the hours adults could work, 3 May 1844. Despite his background as a prosperous Manchester-based cotton manufacturer, he voted against corn law repeal, 27 Mar. 1846, 15 May 1846. He voted with Peel, though, in opposing the factory bill, 22 May 1846.
At the 1847 general election Houldsworth regretted that his ‘exertions’ had not prevented the repeal of the corn laws, but pledged to continue to ‘uphold protectionist principles, and oppose principles of innovation, both in church and state’.
Houldsworth died without issue at his residence at Portland Place, Manchester, in September 1852.
