Brady was a nephew of Denis Caulfield, an ‘eminent distiller’ who by the early years of the nineteenth century was ‘one of the first merchants in Ireland’ and had helped to raise the town of Newry in the scale of commercial importance.
A Reformer, Brady was persuaded by his aforementioned uncle to come forward for Newry at the 1835 general election. Regarded by Conservative opponents as a ‘Radical’, he promised to vote for the abolition of ‘the hateful and odious impost of tithes’, which he considered to be ‘the bane, the curse of our devoted country’.
Having overcome a petition against his return, Brady was quickly identified as one of Daniel O’Connell’s ‘tailsmen’.
In the following session Brady backed the Whigs on the address, 4 Feb. 1836, and divided against the first and second readings of Agnew’s Sabbath observance bill, 21 Apr., 18 May, and Lord Chandos’s motion on agricultural distress, 27 Apr. He voted in favour of Poulett Thomson’s factory regulation bill, 9 May, and divided against a motion that it was a breach of the privileges of the House for members to become the paid advocate of outside bodies, 30 June. He continued to support the government over Irish Church reform, but was one of 18 members to vote in the minority, (against O’Connell), for William Sharman Crawford’s motion for the immediate abolition of Irish tithes, 1 July 1836. In the following session he backed Molesworth’s motion to repeal property qualifications for MPs, 14 Feb. 1837, and divided for the ministry’s proposals on the reform of Irish municipal corporations and the abolition of church rates. In May 1837 he served on the select committee into the operation of the small debts jurisdiction of the Irish manor courts.
Despite rumours that he was to retire at the 1837 general election, Brady re-contested Newry as a supporter of the Whig ministry, but amidst ‘terrible excitement’ in the town was narrowly defeated by an English Conservative.
Thereafter Brady remained active in the political life of his native town and chaired a local meeting of the O’Connellite Precursor Society in November 1838.
A ‘faithful member of the Catholic Church’, Brady joined the campaign to reform the Irish Church establishment in the name of religious equality in 1868, and chaired a meeting of Liberal electors to select a parliamentary candidate in 1871.
Brady died aged 83 at his residence in Bridge Street, Newry after a lingering illness extending over nine months, at which time he was the oldest magistrate in counties Down and Armagh, and one of the last survivors of those who held a parliamentary seat during the reign of William IV.
