A country gentleman who described himself as a ‘Liberal Conservative and a Conservative’, Davenport-Bromley (as he was known before December 1867) could boast an impressive parliamentary pedigree.
Eager to participate in the Crimean War, Davenport-Bromley travelled to the region despite holding no official commission, acting the part of an ‘amateur’ soldier and observer. However, his growing disillusionment with the war and its mismanagement led him to return to England in May 1855 after six months.
Davenport-Bromley made little mark in Parliament before the 1865 general election the following July, when he was elected in second place.
In late 1867 he succeeded his alcoholic first cousin to his grandfather’s Cheshire estates, including Capesthorne, and subsequently changed his name by royal licence to Bromley-Davenport.
