Joseph Samuda also had an important parliamentary career. He was a member of the
Metropolitan Board of Works from 1860 to 1865, whereupon he entered Parliament as the
Liberal MP for
Tavistock. He sat for that constituency until 1868, when he was returned for the
Tower Hamlets, which he represented until 1880. Then he lost his seat owing to his support for
Benjamin Disraeli's foreign policy. While in the House he spoke with much authority on all matters connected with his profession. Some of his speeches are described as "treasure-houses of technical and political knowledge." He abandoned
Judaism and was interred in
Kensal Green Cemetery, London. In 1837 he married Louisa Ballin, daughter of Samuel Ballin of Holloway. The
Samuda Estate, on the site of his shipyard, in
Cubitt Town, is named after him and his brother, and includes Ballin Court, named after his wife, Louisa. They lived at 7 Gloucester Square,
Bayswater and had a daughter called Ada. He was one of the original officers of the
2nd Tower Hamlets Rifle Volunteer Corps raised in the
East End of London in April 1861, when he was commissioned as a captain. == References ==