A landowner and moderate Conservative, who had established a reputation as a prudent and efficient poor law guardian and grand juryman, Burrowes entered Parliament somewhat reluctantly. He generally supported Lord Derby in the Commons, but also backed moderate proposals to reform landlord-tenant relations and amend the system of national education in Ireland, before returning to what he considered to be his primary duty as a resident proprietor.
Burrowes was born in Dublin, the son of a Protestant army officer and landowner.
A supporter of the Conservative interest in Cavan, Burrowes seconded the nomination of Henry Maxwell at the 1835 general election.
A resident proprietor, Burrowes acted sympathetically towards his tenants during the famine by permanently reducing their rents by about a quarter, and it was said that ‘not one’ of them applied for poor law relief.
In December 1852 Burrowes was spoken of as a Protectionist challenger to Young, by then the leading Irish Peelite, who had sought re-election upon his appointment as chief secretary for Ireland. However, he proved unwilling to ‘excite sectarian animosity’ in the county and declined to be a candidate.
Although Burrowes had been strongly backed by the Protestant landlords of Cavan, he claimed to enter Parliament as ‘the nominee of no man’, and insisted that his motto was ‘independence’. On the hustings, however, he had spoken of Lord Derby ‘in terms of the highest praise’, and he generally proved a reliable supporter of his party.
He appears to have spoken only once in the chamber, when, shortly after taking his seat, he intervened in the debate on the ballot to challenge Henry Berkeley’s claim that a Cavan voter had been ‘roasted’ until his ribs appeared ‘to have been well done’ at the recent by-election, and to rebut his charge that Sir John Young had forced his tenants to vote for him.
It was anticipated that after gaining his seat with Orange support, Burrowes would join ‘the war against Maynooth’.
In February 1857 Burrowes was requested by the board of the Cavan Union to present a petition for an inquiry into the state of the Irish poor law.
Burrowes died at Stradone in November 1881 and was succeeded by his only surviving son, Robert James Burrowes (1844-93), an army officer who served as high sheriff of county Cavan in 1883. His only surviving daughter, Frances, had married Sir John Olpherts, of Ballyconnell in 1869.
