Scion of the Whig Anson family, earls of Lichfield, Anson sat for a short time on his father’s interest before succeeding to the peerage. Anson was described on his election by the duke of Bedford as ‘the most promising of the young whig aristocracy’, but his Commons career was unremarkable.
Anson was groomed for politics from an early age. He was too young to stand in the family interest for Lichfield when a vacancy arose in January 1846, but actively campaigned and canvassed for Edward Mostyn Lloyd Mostyn, previously Whig MP for Flintshire, who was elected as a stopgap.
Given his votes with the protectionists, one newspaper commented that Anson had ‘strangely metamorphosed into a Derbyite’.
Anson succeeded his father as 2nd earl of Lichfield in March 1854, when his seat was assumed by his uncle, Henry Manners Cavendish, Lord Waterpark (1793-1863).
Sandon [the previous MP] he tells me is a liberal-conservative. I thought it best to avoid both words and express general views to which no one can take exception and which will leave it open to him to support whoever brings in good measures without regard to their coming from liberal or cons. govts.
Earl of Lichfield to viscount Anson, 16 Apr. 1859, Anson papers, Staffs. RO, D616/P(P)/1/28. Although the letter was to his son, it was meant to be passed on to his brother.
Before the 1865 general election, Lichfield pointedly informed his former colleague and nominee Lord Alfred Paget, who supported extensive parliamentary reform and the ballot, that ‘you may be quite sure that as long as you support such people as Ld Palmerston we shall not disagree’.
