Little is known of Bridges’s antecedents. He was said to have been born in Leeds (where his education was completed) into a family ‘more distinguished for worthiness of character than for extent of property’;
He was elected an alderman of London in May 1811. In the summer of 1816 he was twice an unsuccessful candidate for the office of sheriff, to which he was eventually appointed later in the year. He subsequently claimed that he had been ‘so engaged in commercial concerns’ at the time that he had paid the fine to be excused, but had been persuaded by his political associates to take office ‘as a counterpoise’ to the other sheriff, the radical Robert Kirby. The demagogue Henry Hunt* subsequently alleged that Bridges had been keen ‘to order the troops to charge upon the people and to cut them down’ at the first Spa Fields meeting, 15 Nov. 1816, but had been restrained by his colleague.
Bridges gave general support to the Liverpool ministry, but cast isolated wayward votes. He was appointed to the select committees on agricultural distress, 31 May 1820, 7 Mar. 1821, 18 Feb. 1822. As ex-officio chairman of a London common council meeting requisitioned by supporters of Queen Caroline to vote a supportive address to her, 14 June 1820, he tried in vain to have the business deferred, voted in the hostile minority and then gave his view that the meeting had ‘acted very wrong’. He incensed the livery by having a troop of Guards stationed at Holborn when common hall met to vote a queenite address, 30 June. Attempting to justify his action in the House, 7 July, he was initially silenced by opposition mockery, but he at length obtained a hearing for his explanation that his object had been to ensure preservation of the peace at a tense moment ‘when speeches of an extraordinary kind were delivered and when placards of a most inflammatory and atrocious nature were exhibited in every part of the town’. On 13 July 1820 a censure of his action was carried in common council, who the following year voted to have its words inscribed and fixed to the wall of the Guildhall.
He was one of the seven aldermen who advised Queen Caroline not to attend St. Paul’s to offer her thanks for her release from prosecution in November; voted against common council’s address to the king for the dismissal of his ministers, 2 Dec., and spoke and voted in the court of aldermen for their loyal address, 5 Dec. 1820, when he said that it was ‘shocking to see so much disloyalty, and so many addresses and petitions going up every day, and people hired and paid to dress and go up with them’.
Bridges, who in common council, 27 Feb., approved their proposal for a ‘conciliatory adjustment’ of London tithes,
Bridges spoke in favour of a revision of London tithes, 14 Feb., 17 May 1825. He introduced the St. Olave tithe bill, 18 Mar., and voted for its second reading, 6 June.
Bridges resigned his aldermanic gown in October 1826 and apparently resided thereafter at Brent Lodge, Hanwell, Middlesex, and Brighton, where he bought a freehold house at 30 South Parade, Old Steyne. His elder legitimate son, George, died there, ‘in his 20th year’, 28 Apr. 1837, and Bridges followed suit, ‘in his 78th year’, in March 1840.
