Graham was a boon companion of Lord Byron, his contemporary at university, in Greece during the winter of 1810.
With respect to Sandford Graham, I mentioned him more than once, but we really had hardly one seat that was not offered at the full price, and for that Sir James [Graham] would not have thanked us, and there are now six or eight of our friends disposed to give it and complaining that they are left out.
Ibid. Long to same, 29 Oct. 1812.
Graham’s father proceeded to purchase Viscount Sydney’s moiety of the borough of Ludgershall, which provided an opening for Sandford a month after the meeting of Parliament. Unlike his father, he voted for Catholic relief throughout in 1813 (and again in 1815), but he appeared on the Treasury list of supporters and agreed in October 1813 to second the address. His consent came too late and he was reserved for the next opportunity, seconding on 8 Nov. 1814.
Little Sir James Graham was impudent enough to make this the pretext of turning his son out of a seat, but he has been shamed out of his love of advancement which was the real motive for his unnatural conduct, and young Graham comes into the next Parliament totally unfettered and a sure opposition vote.
Add. 36457, ff. 37-38.
His father was resigned to their difference of opinion in politics.
Graham, who had joined Brooks’s Club, 7 May 1816, did not sign the requisition to Tierney to lead the Whig opposition in the House in 1818, but acted steadily with them, apart from a bout of illness in March and April 1819. He had declined to support the election of Kinnaird for Westminster in 1818 because he objected ‘strenuously’ to universal suffrage and annual Parliaments;
