- Source: William Sproston Caine
William Sproston Caine (26 March 1842 – 17 March 1903) was a British politician and temperance advocate. He was elected to the House of Commons for Scarborough in 1889 and represented the extreme radicals.
Biography
Caine was born at Seacombe, Cheshire, and was the eldest surviving son of Nathaniel Caine, JP, a metal merchant from Cheshire, and his wife Hanna née Rushton. He was educated at private schools in Egremont, Merseyside and Birkenhead before joining his father's business in 1861. In 1864 he was made a partner, before relocating to Liverpool in 1871. In 1873 he was recorded at 16 Alexandra Drive, Liverpool. Public Affairs soon began to occupy large amounts of his attention, and he left the company in 1878.
After his retirement from his father's company, he retained the directorship of the Hodbarrow Mining Co. Ltd, Millom, and he secured the controlling interest of the Shaw's Brown Iron Co., Liverpool, leaving the management of the concern to his partner, Arthur S. Cox. The business terminated in 1893, leaving large amounts of debt which were discharged honourably, but Caine's resources were afterwards devoted largely to paying off the mortgage which he borrowed to meet the company's losses.
Caine was brought up as a Baptist, taught by Hugh Stowell Brown, whose daughter Alice married Caine in 1868; they had two sons (including the author William Caine) and three daughters. Caine would tell the story of how he sat down to drink sherry whilst reading a temperance book by Julia Wightman. He was so convinced that he never drank again.
He joined the Liverpool Temperance and Band of Hope Union, also becoming chairman of the Popular Control and Licensing Reform Association. In 1873 he was elected vice-president of the United Kingdom Alliance. He was also president of the Baptist Total Abstinence Society, the Congregational Temperance Society, the British Temperance League, and the National Temperance Federation.
Caine first became interested in campaigning for parliament in 1873 to advance his temperance opinions, and unsuccessfully contested Liverpool in 1873 and 1874 for the Liberal Party. In 1880 he was elected for Scarborough and, identifying with the extreme radicals, began promoting temperance in the House of Commons. In 1884 he was made Civil Lord of the Admiralty in succession to Thomas Brassey, retaining his seat in parliament by the necessary by-election but losing in the 1885 general election.
In 1886, he was elected for Barrow-in-Furness after a by-election, and played an active part in organising the Liberal Unionist Party, which was nicknamed the "Brand of Caine" as a result. Caine was appointed Chief Whip for the Liberal Unionists, but his extreme temperance opinions soon damaged the Unionist alliance with the Conservative Party. After the passing of a scheme compensating possessors of extinguished public-house licences, Caine resigned as Whip and his membership in the House in protest. He campaigned for reelection at the by-election as an Independent Liberal, but was defeated.
In 1892, he was elected again for Bradford East but lost his seat at the 1895 election. His daughter Hannah married John Roberts, 1st Baron Clwyd in 1893. Another daughter Ruth married Liberal MP Herbert Lewis in 1897. Caine rejoined the House in 1900 for Camborne. Parliamentary activities exhausted his health, and after a journey to South America in 1902 failed to restore it, he died of heart failure in 1903 in Mayfair aged 60.
Caine visited India and realized that India also needed a movement to reduce alcoholism. In 1888 he established the Anglo-Indian Temperance Association in London along with Samuel Smith. In 1888-89 he visited India on a temperance tour along with retired Baptist priest Thomas Evans of Mussoorie. They made use of the network of the Indian National Congress and of missionaries associated with educational institutions for their support. He attended the Allahabad session of the Indian National Congress. Seventeen Indian constituencies gave support and half the Congress delegates became members of local temperance associations. Evans suggested that for effectiveness Caine needed to work through the institution of Indian caste which led to a very effective example in the Kayastha Temperance Society under the leadership of Kamta Prasad. He sought the removal of the Abkari system of revenue that the British government was trying to grow. In 1890 he wrote a series of articles in the Pall Mall Gazette where he advocated Indian self-government. Due to his opposition to alcohol he was praised by Gandhi. It has been suggested that Caine was the model for the story "The Enlightenments of Pagett, M.P." by Rudyard Kipling in which he caricatures a British MP who spends a winter in India and returns to become an expert on solving problems of India. Kipling's "Pagett" was a liberal endorser of A.O. Hume and particularly William Digby to whom Caine dedicated his 1890 guidebook Picturesque India. Caine was on a commission on Indian expediture during 1895-96 and was also on the opium commission but was unable to take part due to poor health.
References
External links
Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by William Sproston Caine
Picturesque India (1890)
A trip round the world in 1887-8 (1888)