Tyrone was heir to an estate of 66,684 acres, almost two thirds of which lay in County Waterford. Upon becoming 4th marquess of Waterford in 1859, his father had reasserted his family’s political influence in the county, and, shortly after reaching his majority, Tyrone was elected unopposed at the 1865 general election for County Waterford. A Conservative, he was the youngest member of the house.
Tyrone succeeded to his father’s title in November 1866, and took his place in the Lords by virtue of his British title of Baron Tyrone of Haverfordwest. In 1880, he came forward as a leading opponent of the Land League, and became Chairman of Irish Land Committee and a prominent member of the Landowners’ Convention of Dublin. From this time onwards, Lord Waterford made numerous contributions to the Lords’ debates, chiefly concerning the amendment of Irish land law, of which he was said to have had a ‘wonderful knowledge’, Irish local government, and the drainage and improvement of agricultural holdings. As a platform speaker he was ‘one of those who hit straight from the shoulder’, his style ‘argumentative, clear, and eloquent’, his speeches ‘full of dash and freshness, and always sensible and to the point’. An energetic and determined opponent of Home Rule and a vice-president of the Irish Unionist Alliance, he took up residence in London in order to help to orchestrate parliamentary opposition to the Liberals’ Irish policy. His last parliamentary speech, in 1893, was made in trenchant opposition to Gladstone’s government of Ireland bill, which he represented as a threat to imperial unity that carried with it ‘the risk of separation and civil war’ in Ireland.
It was thought that Lord Waterford might have held high rank in a Conservative government, but for a severe injury to his spine sustained in a hunting accident in Leicestershire in 1885.
