Purvis then contested the Peterborough by-election in October 1889, but lost to the Liberal candidate Alpheus Morton.[9][10] The election was fought largely on the issue of Home Rule, which Purvis asserted was opposed to the true principles of democracy, because if Ireland got Home Rule because its people wanted it, then they would also have to get separation if they demanded it.[11] (The report in The Times did not explain why Purvis considered separation to be opposed to democracy).
He contested the seat again in 1892, cutting Morton's majority to 158 votes (4% of the total), down from 251 votes (7%)in 1889.[9] Purvis won Peterborough on his third attempt,[6]
when he defeated Morton at the 1895 general election.[9][12]
Morton had hoped to contest the seat again in 1900, but the local Liberals declined to nominate him again,[13] and Purvis was re-elected[14] with a reduced majority over the Liberal candidate Halley Stewart.[9]
Purvis continued as an active Liberal Unionist, and in December 1908 he was one of several speaker at a mass meeting on tariff reform held in Stamford.[18] He contested Peterborough again at the January 1910 general election, but even before Parliament was dissolved on 10 January,[19]The Times was pessimistic about his chances.[20] The Liberal majority in 1906 was "decisive", and Greenwood had the support of most of Peterborough's railway and engineering workers made up a large proportion of the electorate.[20] When the votes were counted, Greenwood had held the seat, although with a more modest majority of 43 votes (7%).[9]
In 1914, he supported calls by Unionist MP Jesse Collings for tenant farmers to become owner-occupiers of their lands.[21] He saw it as an alternative to encouraging he emigration of young men to take up land grants in the colonies, and as a bulwark against radical Liberal proposals to nationalise the land.
Family and death
In 1874 Purvis married Elizabeth Marion Peat, eldest daughter of William Henry Peat, a merchant from London.[5]
^ ab"New Members of Parliament". The Times. London. 18 July 1895. p. 3. Retrieved 17 December 2010. (subscription required)
^Craig, F. W. S. (1989) [1974]. British parliamentary election results 1885–1918 (2nd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. p. 221. ISBN0-900178-27-2.