Of Cornish descent, John Ellis relied upon his skills as a metropolitan lawyer to build a brief parliamentary career as an active Conservative back-bencher for an Irish constituency. Although he was not connected with commercial pursuits, he was dismissed by his Irish antagonists as a ‘London haberdasher’, and was twice ‘stigmatised as a stranger’ to the constituencies for which he sought election.
Ellis was born in London, the younger son of a barrister at Gray’s Inn, who dealt in the conveyance of Cornish land, and was for many years an active magistrate at Penzance.
Ellis claimed that it was ‘the reckless conduct’ of the Whig ministry that impelled him to seek a parliamentary seat at the 1837 general election. He believed that ‘the battle of the Constitution was to be fought’ in Ireland and had himself adopted by ‘the Protestant interest’ at Newry, insisting that it was his ‘national birthright’ to claim to represent any constituency ‘within the United Empire’.
From the outset Ellis proved a reliable supporter of the Conservatives, and voted for Sir Robert Peel’s resolution on the civil pensions list, 8 Dec. 1837. Although an Englishman, he was active in taking up issues affecting his Irish backers and spoke frequently in debate. While awaiting the outcome of the petition against him he made an impromptu speech in the Commons, 5 Dec. 1837, springing to the defence of Sir William Verner, Tory MP for County Armagh. Verner had been removed from the commission of the peace for toasting ‘the Battle of the Diamond’ at a gathering which, Ellis insisted, had been an entirely private affair and ought not to have come under public scrutiny.
Although Ellis divided against O’Connell’s motion to stop the Irish poor law bill, 9 Feb. 1838, he subsequently argued that ‘the able-bodied poor’ ought to be admitted into the workhouses, on the ground that ‘every state was bound to provide for all of its members who were in a state of destitution, without making distinctions as to age and sickness’.
Ellis was a staunch defender of the Established Church, but was anxious to ‘keep all those within the Pale of the Constitution who have gained admittance into it’, and while he was in favour of a committee to inquire into ‘the state of education’ at Maynooth, in July 1838 he opposed calls to ‘reject the grant’.
Ellis continued to be hostile to the Whig administration, arguing that it was too weak and untrustworthy to instil any confidence in its proposals for Irish municipal reform, and believing that the government’s bill was ‘calculated to endanger the dearest rights and interests of the Protestant subjects of these kingdoms’, he joined the small minority which opposed its third reading, 8 Mar. 1839.
While convinced that there had not been any ‘want of generosity on the part of England towards Ireland’, in July 1839 Ellis described the bill for the navigation of the Shannon as ‘exceedingly obnoxious’, and argued that instead of extending its patronage with ‘a whole corps of placemen’, the government ought to have placed the scheme under the responsibility of the Irish board of public works.
Ellis returned to Newry in December 1839, and shortly before departing to vote against the ministry in the confidence vote, 31 Jan. 1840, criticised the government’s efforts to maintain order in Ireland. In what the Conservative press described as a clear and sound speech by ‘an able and spirited representative’, (but which was derided by one Liberal newspaper as ‘the tomfoolery of a stage-struck grocer’),
After local Conservatives concluded that Francis Needham, Viscount Newry and Mourne, would be better able to fend off a Liberal challenge at Newry, Ellis retired at the 1841 general election.
Having fought the election in a ‘straightforward’ manner, and taken his defeat with a ‘gallant bearing’, Ellis passed into obscurity and little is known of his later life.
