Shawe, a small-scale Suffolk farmer who possessed a ‘weather-beaten face’, had a perfunctory parliamentary career in which his local opponents persistently questioned his loyalty to the agricultural interest.
At the 1832 general election Shawe, with the support of Harland, offered as a Reformer for the newly-created division of Suffolk East, where the farming interest was particularly vocal. Unsurprisingly, he took great pains to present himself as a champion of the agricultural interest, fervently opposing the abolition of the corn laws and calling for a reform of tithes. Although a committed churchman, he wanted Dissenters to be relieved of paying church rates, but was careful to insist that he was ‘a Reformer, not a Revolutionist’.
Shawe, like his father before him, was a silent Member, though he was a regular presence in the division lobbies, where he often voted against Whig ministers.
At the 1835 general election, therefore, Shawe was subject to a stream of attacks in the correspondence pages of the Conservative-supporting Ipswich Journal, purportedly from the local farming community. These ranged from highlighting his inconsistency in the division lobby to the more sinister claim, published in a handbill by ‘Brother Farmers’, that he had abused his position as a magistrate by preventing a proposed county meeting to demonstrate against the malt tax, an accusation which he dismissed as ‘a false and calumnious libel’.
Although his was parliamentary career over, Shawe remained a prominent figure in local Whig circles. At the 1843 Suffolk East by-election he seconded the nomination of the Whig candidate, and attacked Peel for threatening his party with the prospect of Lord John Russell gaining power if they didn’t support him, ‘just exactly as little children run away from an old nurse when she threatens them with the old man in the cupboard’.
Shawe died without issue at Stapleton House, his Gloucestershire residence acquired through marriage, in October 1855, having been in poor health for some years.
