Towneley unsuccessfully stood for election for the Whigs in Oxford at a by-election in 1833, caused when his brother-in-law's election was declared void on petition.[6] He stood again in South Lancashire at the 1837 general election, but was also unsuccessful.[7] He was first elected Whig MP for Sligo Borough, Ireland at a by-election in April 1848. However, after a committee formed due to an election petition found he was, by his agents, guilty of treating, he was declared unelected in June, causing a by-election in July.[8][9] He returned to the seat as an Independent Irish MP after the 1852 general election but, in 1853, again was unseated. Upon another petition, bribery by his agents was again discovered.[10] He made no further bids for parliament afterwards.[2]
Military
In the build-up to the Crimean War, Towneley was commissioned on 16 March 1853 to raise the 5th Royal Lancashire Militia with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel Commandant.[11] The auxiliary regiment was already embodied, when war was declared against Russia on 28 March, the following year. In May 1855 they began duty at Aldershot and moved to Clonmel, Ireland at the start of December. From mid-April 1856, the regiment spent a month in Dublin, before returning to Burnley to be disembodied on 6 June.[12] He retired from the command on 23 March 1863 and was appointed Honorary Colonel of the regiment. John Towneley was originally commissioned as one of the Majors, and succeeded Charles in both roles.[13][14]
Cattle and horse breeder
Burnley Solicitor, Richard Eastwood had been appointed as the Towneley legal advisor and land agent by Peregrine Towneley, and continued in the role when Charles inherited the estate. He was also fundamental to the two enterprises that brought Towneley the most publicity. His highly-acclaimed stock of the Butterfly family of Shorthorn cattle and his horse stud.[15]
It was Eastwood who sold his small herd of Shorthorns to Towneley in 1848. From this herd, the cow Butterfly won many exhibition prizes and produced many successful calves. Towneley was the only exhibitor to win Ireland's Purcell Challenge Cup three years running.[17]
The situation of Towneley Hall was not ideal for rearing prize cattle. The clay subsoil and higher than average rainfall meant that corn failed to ripen on average one in every six years. Much of the root vegetables and straw required for the animals, had to be transported in. Burnley was rapidly expanding and industrialising, and black smoke from the chimneys mixed with a white sulphuric acid containing fog from a nearby tile works, killing trees and negatively effecting the grass. Increasing numbers of people walked in the park, transferring diseases and leading to incidents with dogs.[18]
Nevertheless over 14 years, the herd won 22 cups, 26 gold medals and over one hundred silver and bronze medals, and more than £2,000 in prize money. Among these prizes was the Farmers Gazette Challenge Cup, which Towneley won, the first three years it was offered. When the heard was sold in 1864, approximately 3,000 people attended the auction at Towneley Hall. Around £7,700 was raised in total for the 56 lots included in the sale.[18]
Meanwhile, Eastwood moved to Thorneyholme Hall on Towneley's Whitewell Estate and took on the management of Root Stud Farm there, until shortly before his death in the summer of 1871.[19]
The horse Hesperithusa won the 1858 Royal Hunt Cup at Ascot and Butterfly won the 1860 Epsom Oaks though both were registered to Eastwood.[20]
His horse Kettledrum won the 1861 Epsom Derby, he (and possibly others) used the winnings to build St Hubert's catholic church in Dunsop Bridge.[21]
In 1862, Whitewell (sired by Stockwell) won the Londesborough Plate handicap at Doncaster, Doefoot (sired by King of Trumps) won the Queen's plate at Epsom, Cellarius won the Marine Plate handicap at Brighton, Imperatrice (sired by Orlando) won the Park Hill Stakes at Doncaster, and Newchurch (sired by Newminster) won The Knowsley Nursery Handicap Stakes.[22]
In 1863, Doefoot won the Salford Borough Cup at Manchester, Cellarius won the Consolation Scramble handicap at Pontefract and the Ainderby Plate at Northallerton, Newchurch won the Doncaster Plate and the Town Plate at Stockton, and Hubert (also sired by Stockwell) won the Town Plate at Doncaster.[23]
In 1873, the family landholdings brought in rents totalling £26,979 (the equivalent of approximately £3 million as of 2023[a]) and comprised 14,086 acres in Lancashire with 23,153 acres in Yorkshire and 2,826 acres in County Durham. As he had no male heir, upon Towneley's death in 1876, his brother John inherited the family estates. John's only son Richard, died before he did, and it became necessary to divide the property between the seven daughters of the two brothers, requiring a private Act of Parliament.[32]
^Trustees of the Museum (10 December 1898). Statutes and Rules for the British Museum. London: Woodfall and Kinder. p. 31 – via Internet Archive (Biodiversity Heritage Library).