A keen huntsman, Curzon was a firm, if largely silent, supporter of the established Church and the Conservative leadership. His great-grandfather, Assheton Curzon, the 2nd son of Sir Nathaniel Curzon, 4th baronet, of Kedleston, Derbyshire, had been created 1st baron Curzon in 1794, and advanced to the rank of viscount in 1802. His son and heir Penn Assheton Curzon (1757-96) married Sophia, daughter and heiress of the celebrated admiral, Richard Howe, 1st earl Howe, whose family possessed land in the east Midlands. Their only son Richard William Penn Curzon (1796-1870) succeeded his grandfather as 2nd viscount Curzon in 1820 and the following year adopted his mother’s maiden name shortly before being created 1st earl Howe, of the second creation. He succeeded his mother to the barony of Howe in 1835, was a privy councillor and lord chamberlain 1830-1, 1834-49.
As the eldest son of the 1st earl Howe, Curzon secured a number of positions in the Leicestershire yeomanry after leaving Oxford. Unlike his father, who, despite his Conservatism, held aloof from the local party, largely because he differed with them over the corn laws, Curzon was regarded as an uncompromising protectionist, and in 1846 it was reported that he would supplant one of South Leicestershire’s MPs who was considered to be lukewarm on restoring agricultural tariffs.
At Westminster, Curzon opposed the abolition of church rates and supported Spooner’s motion to abolish the Maynooth grant to the Catholic seminary in Ireland. He disapproved of the ballot and shorter parliaments but divided in favour of the Derby government’s reform bill in 1859, and at the election of that year he was again returned unopposed.
Curzon topped the poll at the 1868 general election and succeeded his father as 2nd Earl Howe two years later.
