A ‘firm friend of the shipwrecked’, who was best known for pioneering the introduction of lifeboats on the British coastline, Palmer sat for over a decade as Conservative Member for Essex South and was responsible for important legislation improving the safety of timber ships.
Maritime safety, though, remained Palmer’s foremost concern, and in 1826 he began working with the National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck (known as the Royal National Lifeboat Institution after 1854), an organisation he went on to serve as deputy chairman for a quarter of a century. In 1828 his design of a lifeboat was officially adopted by the institution, which became his main claim to fame. By 1844 lifeboats based on his work had been placed at over 30 coastal locations around the British Isles.
Now established as one of the shipping interest’s most prominent figures, Palmer accepted a requisition from the electors of South Shields to stand in the Conservative interest at the 1832 general election, but following a campaign marred by accusations that local shipowners on his election committee had pressurised their employees to vote for him, he was comfortably defeated by the Newcastle-upon-Tyne lawyer Robert Ingham.
Palmer made his mark in his first full Parliament through his crusade to address the loss of life caused by shipwrecks. In April 1839 he successfully moved for a select committee to consider the regulation of timber trading ships crossing the Atlantic Ocean.
In addition to these legislative achievements, Palmer attended steadily, initially following Peel into the division lobbies on the major commercial and ecclesiastical questions of the day. His early contributions to debate reflected his fervent opposition to excessive centralisation and the removal of local authority. He felt poor law commissioners appointed under the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act had ‘invaded ... the constitutional rights and liberties of the people of this country’, but his motion for the release of correspondence between commissioners was defeated, 27 July 1838. After dismissing the poor law commission continuance bill as an ‘infringement upon the rights of the people’, he was in a hardcore minority of 35 Members who voted against it, 15 July 1839. His motion to delay the second reading of the poor rates collection bill was defeated by 51 votes to 16, 7 Aug. 1839. He also spoke out against giving ecclesiastical commissioners powers to distribute church property, 25 Feb. 1839. His background as an East Indian merchant came to the fore when he sharply condemned the Melbourne ministry’s lack of foresight regarding relations with China and the extent of the opium trade carried on by British ships, 8 Apr. 1840. In a lengthy intervention in a debate on the sugar duties, he attacked the free trade policies of the Whig government, 13 May 1841. Unsurprisingly, he voted for Peel’s motion of no confidence in Melbourne’s administration, 4 June 1841.
Addressing his constituents at the 1841 general election, Palmer launched a withering attack on the ‘delusive theories of the free traders’, claiming melodramatically that the repeal of the corn laws would make rural farmers like ‘serfs of Poland, who eat nothing but black bread, which you would hardly give to your pigs’.
His uneasiness with Peel’s leadership, however, continued to grow, and spilled over during a debate on the Maynooth grant in May 1845, when he openly questioned the premier’s attitude towards his own party, before voting against the college’s permanent endowment.
With his health declining, Palmer retired from the Commons at the 1847 dissolution.
Palmer died at Nazeing Park after a short illness in May 1853.
