On entering Parliament John Benbow declared that he would be thoroughly independent ‘of any ministry or any party of men’.
Benbow was said to have been ‘the kindred’ of the celebrated naval commander Admiral John Benbow (1653?-1702), and was the son of a gentleman who resided near Bewdley, Worcestershire.
At the 1837 general election Benbow was selected as a Conservative candidate for Wolverhampton. He was regarded as ‘a sworn enemy’ of the government, and endeavoured to ‘excite the populace’ of the borough against the Whigs by denouncing the poor laws, which he argued were ‘cruelly inflicting punishment upon poverty and distress’.
In December 1837 Benbow gave evidence at the bar of the House concerning the Pontefract election petition, for which he had helped to arrange the sureties.
Benbow’s politics were said to be those of ‘a liberal Conservative’ or ‘pure Peelite’, and upon the resignation of the sitting Tory member in August 1844 he was adopted as a candidate by the Dudley Conservatives.
A silent member, Benbow did not take a prominent part in the proceedings of the House and, having entered parliament at the advanced age of 75, was immediately excused from all attendance on parliamentary committees.
Benbow was opposed to the endowment of the Catholic clergy, but did not vote on the Maynooth College bill in 1845, a matter on which Lord Ward’s views were not publicly known.
Between 1844 and 1850 Benbow moved from opposing to supporting legislation to protect factory workers.
At the 1847 general election Benbow overcame popular resentment of Lord Ward’s interference in Dudley by conciliating the borough’s ‘respectable’ Liberals. Attempting to balance the interests of trade and agriculture, he advocated the gradual removal of all duties and offered the somewhat opaque claim to have ‘supported those measures which the exigencies of the times and the conflicting claims of the various interests of our free but complicated state seemed to me to demand’.
On the hustings Benbow professed a ‘complete abhorrence’ of Chartism and he consistently opposed parliamentary reform, voting against Hume’s ‘little charter’, 6 July 1848.
By now Benbow had acquired a reputation as ‘one of those members who rarely record their opinions by a vote in parliament’.
In spite of his ‘extreme age’, Benbow’s professional connection to Lord Ward made his re-election ‘all but certain’ at the 1852 general election.
Benbow divided against Villiers’s free trade motion, 26 Nov. 1852, but backed Lord Palmerston’s subsequent amendment and voted for Disraeli’s budget, 16 Dec. 1852. However, perhaps reflecting the changing party political position of Lord Ward, who was seeking to revive the family earldom, he subsequently lent support to the Aberdeen coalition, being one of 43 Conservatives who were ‘won over from Derby’ to vote for Gladstone’s budget, 2 May 1853.
During his time in Parliament Benbow lived in London with his unmarried daughter, Eliza, and remained for some years in legal practice with his son-in-law, William Alban, and younger son, John Henry Benbow, who had become solicitor to Lord Ward in 1843.
