Wild in his youth, Goulburn, the younger brother of the leading Conservative Henry Goulburn (1784-1856), made good use of his legal expertise during his short parliamentary career. His father Munbee Goulburn, a West Indian plantation owner, died intestate in 1793, and his widow’s resultant financial struggles meant that Edward was pulled out of school and educated by his elder brother, who also had the responsibility of untangling their father’s finances.
At the 1832 general election Goulburn finished third behind two Reformers at Ipswich, where his chances and those of a colleague were hampered by an unofficial Tory candidate.
Making his maiden speech on the king’s speech, 26 Feb. 1835, Goulburn unfavourably compared the late Whig ministry to Peel’s new administration, claiming that the latter had the ‘confidence of nine-tenths of the people of this country’.
He forcefully argued that more time should be given to the parliamentary inquiry into the poor laws so that its operation in the manufacturing districts could be investigated, causing John Walter to drop his motion for an immediate report.
At the 1837 general election, he was soundly beaten into third place at Leicester by two Reformers, and after unsuccessfully contesting Carlisle in 1841, when he lost out on second place by fifty votes, Goulburn gave up on politics.
