On this day … 11 August 1879

Robert Townley Parker, twice MP for Preston and its guild mayor in 1862, died aged 86 at his home, Cuerden Hall. His wife, Harriet, had died the previous year. For getting on for nearly half a century, he was the leading Tory both in Preston and in North Lancashire: a fully paid-up member of Lancashire’s territorial aristocracy.

He was born to privilege, the heir to a vast estate which he inherited at the age of one, on the death of his father in 1794. He saw it grow to nearly 8,000 acres at the time of his own death, which included not only Cuerden, but also the Astley Hall estate in Chorley and the Royle Hall estate in Burnley.

Robert Towneley Parker (1793-1879), MP for Preston
Robert Townley Parker by Philip Westcott (1815–1878). Harris Museum & Art Gallery: https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/robert-towneley-parker-17931879-mp-for-preston-152612

Given his landowner background, he was a rather unusual choice to represent Preston in parliament, disliking free trade, the reform of the Corn Laws, the giving of the vote to working class men and the introduction of the secret ballot. This was at a time when Preston was the scene of mass protests against the Corn Laws and for electoral reform.

Although a lifelong Tory, he was no slavish party man, disapproving of some of Sir Robert Peel’s policies and actively disliking Disraeli. And he refused to act simply in the interests of his constituents, when it went against his conscience:

‘I could have given my vote [in line with the town’s Anti Corn Law Association] … for the sake of popularity it would perhaps have been the most expedient conduct; but in so doing I must either have disguised my real sentiments … or have acknowledged myself the Delegate of the Electors of Preston, and have abandoned all the feelings on an independent Member of Parliament.’ [Emphasis in original].

He was the archetypal landed gentleman, as county magistrate regularly sentencing poachers, with whom his gamekeepers engaged in armed combat on his estate. In 1825, fourteen poachers were ambushed by a larger number of gamekeepers on the Cuerden Hall estate, leaving one poacher dead and several wounded.

He was a Freemason, with two lodges named for him, and a supporter of the many ultra-Protestant Orange Order lodges that flourished in Lancashire.

Yet, he was also a lifelong supporter of Catholics, counting among his friends, Cardinal Manning, the archbishop of Westminster, and a bishop of Liverpool. When he decided not to stand for re-election as MP, a delegation of Preston Catholics went to Cuerden Hall to try to persuade him to change his mind. And hundreds of Catholic children from Preston were given the free run of the Cuerden Hall grounds.

Robert Townley Parker as a young man
Robert Townley Parker (after a miniature by Thomas Hargreaves, 1810) by William Lucas (1840–1895). Astley Hall Museum and Art Gallery: https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/robert-townley-parker-17931879-150264

His early engagement with the Catholic Church came when as a young man he visited Italy shortly after leaving Eton, accompanied by a tutor/companion on a two-year grand tour of Europe. They were granted an audience with Pope Pius VII. A meeting he recollected with pleasure at the end of his long life.

That European tour, in 1814, was somewhat curtailed by the Napoleonic War that had put large parts of the Continent out of bounds to English travellers. Instead, he and his companion headed south, taking in the then largely unexplored Albania. The two-volume account of their travels still serves modern visitors to that country.

He was back in Europe in 1827 with his wife, Harriet, and their three infant children. They spent five years abroad, where two more of their children were born. The family returned to Cuerden Hall in 1833, and as their coach neared the hall, their tenants unhitched the horses and pulled the couple back home.

Cuerden Hall drawing
Design for alterations and additions to Cuerden Hall, for Robert Townley Parker by the architect Lewis Wyatt (dated 1816): elevation of the east front: https://www.ribapix.com/design-for-alterations-and-additions-to-cuerden-hall-lancashire-for-robert-townley-parker-elevation-of-the-east-front_riba96261

Parker then entered fully into public life, becoming MP for Preston for his first term in 1837. In that term, he shepherded the Ribble bill through parliament.

He was generally agreed to be a generous and honourable individual, loved by his supporters and respected by his opponents: a far more complex character than his public persona would suggest.


Source
This is based on notes for a short biography of Robert Townley Parker. More can be found here:
A new portrait of Robert Townley Parker
Preston Orange Order MP’s Catholic sympathies
Put ‘Townley Parker’ in the search box above for a great deal more on the man and his place in the history of Preston.


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