Bramley-Moore, ‘a moderately bulky and rather round-shouldered man, with a kindly enough face’, represented Maldon and Lincoln in the Conservative interest, but was best known for pioneering the dramatic extension of the Liverpool docks in the 1840s.
Little is known of Bramley-Moore’s early childhood. He was the second son of Thomas Moore, of Pontefract, Yorkshire, but his mother’s heritage is unclear. In 1814 he emigrated to Rio de Janeiro, where he became a successful merchant. In 1830 he married Seraphina Hibernia, daughter of William Pennell, British consul-general for Brazil.
Bramley-Moore returned to England in 1835, settling in Liverpool, where he established himself as the head of the successful Brazilian merchant house Bramley-Moore & Co., and was elected an alderman by the borough council.
Although Bramley-Moore seemingly swept all before him as chairman of the Liverpool dock committee, he found entering (and staying) in the Commons a more protracted affair. At the 1852 general election he came forward as a Conservative candidate for Hull, an important port where his impassioned criticism of the recent repeal of the navigation laws played well to the gallery. His staunch opposition to ‘all aggressions of popery’ also endeared him to the Conservative faithful, but following a hard-fought contest, he was defeated in third place.
Bramley-Moore took his time to find his feet in the Commons. He attended regularly – he was present for 131 out of 198 divisions in the 1856 session – but was largely silent in debate for his first two sessions.
At the 1857 general election Bramley-Moore called for income tax to be reduced for those on low pay, explaining that, for him, ‘Conservatism’ meant helping to raise the labouring man in the social scale. He also appeared to have softened his stance on free trade, insisting that he did not wish to see a return to protectionism, only a level playing field for British merchants. He was re-elected in second place.
In his second Parliament Bramley-Moore was more vocal in debate, especially on shipping issues and Britain’s relations with Brazil. Speaking in support of Roebuck’s motion for a committee to consider establishing better relations with the South American country, he asserted that he knew the Brazilian people ‘intimately’, and criticised Palmerston for suggesting that Brazil had not done all it could have to extinguish the slave trade. He also denounced the 1845 Aberdeen Act, which gave the British navy authority to stop and search any Brazilian ship suspected of carrying slaves, as a violation of that country’s sovereignty. He was one of only seventeen MPs who subsequently voted for Roebuck’s motion, which was defeated by an overwhelming majority of 295 votes.
Bramley-Moore originally intended to defend his Maldon seat at the 1859 general election, but following ‘differences of a personal kind’ with the second Conservative candidate, he withdrew from the contest and instead accepted an invitation to stand for the Hampshire port of Lymington.
It was in his third Parliament that Bramley-Moore emerged as arguably Westminster’s most vocal champion of Brazil. Britain’s diplomatic relations with the country were at a particular low in 1863, following the decision of William Dougal Christie, Britain’s ambassador to Brazil, to aggressively demand that Brazil pay an indemnity for the recent shipwreck of the British merchantman, the Prince of Wales, near the Rio Grande do Sul.
Bramley-Moore continued to be a steady attender, voting with the Conservative opposition on the major domestic and foreign questions of the day, including Disraeli’s motion criticising the government’s handling of the Schleswig-Holstein question, 8 July 1864. He consistently voted against church rate abolition, the abolition of tests of religious faith at Oxford University and radical motions to reform the borough and county franchises. He was an active member of the 1864 select committee on the weighing of grain at the port of London.
Bramley-Moore died while staying at 116 Marine Parade, Brighton, in November 1886, and was buried at St Michael’s-in-the-Hamlet, Toxteth Park, Liverpool.
