Lord Burghersh was to have been provided with a seat in Parliament by his uncle Lord Lonsdale, who as early as 1802 was contemplating his return for Cockermouth when he came of age. In the event he was returned for Lyme on the family interest. Three days afterwards he joined Brooks’s Club, but he voted against the repeal of the Additional Force Act, 30 Apr. 1806. He was then whisked off to Sicily and Egypt as assistant adjutant-general (1806-7). He supported Portland’s administration in which his father had a cabinet seat, without showing any political convictions, surfacing in debate only once, on the price of wheat, 3 June 1808. He informed his father from the Peninsula, where he had proceeded as aide-de-camp to Sir Arthur Wellesley, 18 Sept. 1809, that ‘the military is a profession which I most sincerely love’.
Burghersh, considered ‘a talkative and good natured man’, was listed ‘against the Opposition’ in 1810. Late that year he returned from the Peninsula on sick leave, entertained Perceval to campaign news and voted with ministers on the Regency, 1 Jan. 1811. At this time he hankered after diplomatic employment, hoping to be sent to Austria.
Burghersh’s correspondence with his family from the Peninsula and from his diplomatic assignments has been published; he also wrote memoirs of Wellington’s campaigns (1820) and of allied operations (1822). He was a keen composer of operas and sacred music and founder of the Royal Academy of Music (1823). He died 16 Oct. 1859.
