Galway, ‘a real English gentleman’ with ‘an unswerving adherence to Conservative opinions’, represented East Retford for nearly three decades, though his brief appointment as a lord-in-waiting to Queen Victoria was the only highlight of an otherwise unremarkable parliamentary career.
Galway’s entrance into political life was a hesitant one. After initially indicating to the 4th duke of Newcastle, East Retford’s dominant landowner, in 1846 that he would offer for the borough,
He has behaved in the shabbiest and most harassing manner, he will and he will not [stand]. I shall be very glad if another shall be chosen instead of him – he does not merit an honor which he does nothing to obtain. I suspect that he will seldom vote as we should wish.
Unhappy reactionary, 147.
Galway, however, eventually opted to stand, and with little prospect of securing an alternative Conservative candidate, Newcastle, after further meetings with Galway, gave him his support.
Despite Newcastle’s concerns about his voting habits, Galway’s loyalty to the leadership of Disraeli and Derby was unquestionable. He was present at a private dinner hosted by Disraeli in July 1848 which sought to heal Conservative rifts, and in the Commons he followed him into the division lobby on all major issues.
Following his appointment as a lord-in-waiting to Queen Victoria in March 1852, Galway stood for re-election and declared his unwavering loyalty to Derby, whose ministry ‘had the right to ask [for] fair play at the hands of the county and its opponents’. Although dismissive of the benefits of free trade, he admitted that it would be a ‘folly’ to reintroduce agricultural protection. He saved his vitriol on the issue for an attack on Cobden, whom he labelled ‘an almost bankrupt calico printer’.
A more frequent attender in his second Parliament, Galway voted against Villiers’s resolution praising corn law repeal, but backed Palmerston’s subsequent resolution on free trade, 26 Nov. 1852.
Galway’s speeches increased a little in length in this period, but lacked any impact. He spoke out in opposition to the Aberdeen ministry’s succession duty bill, which proposed to increase the tax placed on the acquisition of property by inheritance, calling it ‘downright robbery’, 16 June 1853, but his amendment to limit the operation of the proposed legislation until 1860 was defeated by 195 votes to 125, 7 July 1853. He also spoke at greater length in opposition to the poor law amendment (no. 2) bill, criticising the move to abolish Gilbert Unions and the transfer of additional powers from boards of guardians to the poor law board, 3 July 1856.
At the 1857 general election Galway was unequivocal in his support for the Conservative leadership, describing himself as ‘a party man’ who ‘could not act independently’ but behaved ‘honestly’. He had little time for those who were not party men, as ‘they never know where they had him’.
Galway’s fervent loyalty to Derby extended to a deep mistrust of the Peelites. Following the fall of the Liberal government in February 1858, he privately warned against bringing Gladstone into a newly-formed Derby ministry, writing to William Jolliffe, ‘what rascals these Peelites are, a thorn in the side of both parties. Shall we lose much by G. not joining?’
Re-elected for a sixth consecutive time without opposition at the 1865 general election, Galway gave lukewarm support to an extension of the franchise, arguing that ‘mere numbers’ must not be allowed to ‘predominate over the just claims of education, intelligence, and property’.
Galway was returned unopposed at the 1868 and 1874 general elections before dying in harness at the family seat of Serlby Hall in February 1876. His immediate cause of death was inflammation of the bladder, though one obituary suggested that his unwavering ‘relish’ for fox hunting ‘in all kinds of weather’ had ultimately broken ‘his ordinarily athletic frame’.
