Member profile:
A young Whig with a distinguished military record, the pugnacious Anson was one of the ‘leading spirits’ of the Adullamites, the dissident Liberals who brought down Earl Russell’s ministry over the reform question in 1866.
Anson’s father, Thomas William Anson, 1st earl of Lichfield, was the leader of Staffordshire’s Whigs and possessed the dominant influence in Lichfield.
Shortly after returning from India in 1859 Anson was returned unopposed on the family’s interest at Lichfield, promising to ‘firmly resist any measure of extensive enfranchisement’ and to oppose ‘secret voting, for the reason that the ballot is contrary to the spirit of the English constitution’.
Anson was re-elected in first place at the 1865 general election. The following year, he formed part of the Adullamite Whig faction led by Earl Grosvenor, supported from the Lords by his brother, who had become the 2nd earl of Lichfield in 1854.
After the defeat of the reform bill and resignation of the Liberal government in June 1866, Anson apparently concurred with the overtures Grosvenor threw out to Lord Derby about a possible Adullamite-Conservative coalition, under a Whig peer such as Clarendon.
The expectations that the Adullamites might form a third party or coalition with the Conservatives came to nothing, and Anson, like the others, returned to the Liberal fold after the passing of the Representation of the People Act in 1867. (The Adullamite tendencies of Anson and his brother did, however, prove to be a harbinger of the family’s future Liberal Unionism). Thereafter Anson became preoccupied with military issues. Having found his voice in the House, Anson had successfully proposed a select committee in 1867 to consider the redeployment of native Indian soldiers to other parts of the empire to ease imperial overstretch.
At the 1868 general election, Anson was defeated at Lichfield, now reduced to one member, by his erstwhile Conservative colleague. He was again defeated at Bewdley at a by-election the following year, but seated on petition.
