On this day … 23 October 1869

On 23 October 1869 at 6.55 am, Edward Geoffrey Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby and head of the Stanley family, died at his home Knowsley Hall, where he had been born in 1799, ‘after being for days in a state of semi-consciousness due to the large quantities of opium administered to relieve his pain’.

Derby, three times prime minister, had been ailing for some time and had handed over the premiership to Disraeli. It was the end to a long and illustrious career, commemorated in Preston by his statue in Miller Park and in London by one in Parliament Square.

That Preston statue represents a recognition that the town had welcomed back the Stanleys, following the estrangement earlier in the century, when the young Edward Stanley had lost his Preston seat in a parliamentary by-election, and the Stanleys had withdrawn from the town in disgust, pulling down their Preston base, Patten House, shortly after.

There is a long account of his life published on line in 2022 in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, which can be accessed for free by anybody with a Lancashire County Council library card. That article reveals that he was an early puller down of statues, when while at Oxford in 1819 he led:

‘… a group of drunk undergraduates who, late one night, pulled the figure of Mercury, erected in 1695, down from its plinth in the centre of Christ Church’s Great Quadrangle. The college authorities drew a discreet veil over what was regarded as a gentlemanly escapade.’

His biography in the History of Parliament, suggests that it took Stanley some time to settle down:

‘Dashing, boyish and witty when seeking to charm, his many detractors would, however, invariably find fault with his overbearing superciliousness – Sydney Smith wrote of him, when fresh from Oxford, that ‘a more unmannerly, ungracious person I never saw’ – and not a few commentators, his grandfather apparently among them, were later to doubt whether he could scale the heights of statesmanship that seemed to await him.’

In 1826, a more sober and serious Stanley was returned as MP for Preston, defeating the radical, William Cobbett. As a young MP, he supported Catholic emancipation and the repeal of the corn laws (although later in his career he opposed their repeal). He shone in Commons debates, being described by the The Times as the only ‘brilliant eldest son produced by the British peerage for a hundred years’.

Another radical, Henry ‘Orator’ Hunt, plucked the Preston seat from Stanley in an 1830 by-election, much to the surprise and dismay of his supporters. Stanley himself blamed the ‘stupidity or ill-will’ of the returning officer, Nicholas Grimshaw, for his defeat, which prompted the Stanley family’s withdrawal from the town, and the pulling down of Patten House, shortly after. King William IV soon had him back in Parliament, making the constituency of the royal borough of Windsor available to him.

From 1846 until shortly before his death, Stanley led the Conservative Party. In 1852, Stanley, who had succeeded his father as fourteenth Earl of Derby in 1851, formed a short-lived Conservative government (they were out of office by the end of the year). He was to be prime minister twice more: from 1858 to 1859 and from 1866 until 1868.


Sources:
The Dictionary of National Biography: https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/26265
The History of Parliament: https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/…/smith…


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