Member profile:
A ‘gallant, distinguished and venerable officer’ and ‘worthy old general’, Anson, a Whig with a distinguished military record in the Peninsula War, continued to sit on the interest of his nephew, Thomas William Anson, 2nd viscount Anson and 1st earl of Lichfield.
Anson topped the poll in 1832 and 1835 after facing a token Radical opponent, and was returned unopposed in 1837. Describing himself as ‘an old Reformer’ whose ‘principles were unchanged’ in 1835, two years later a parliamentary guide remarked that ‘the politics of the Anson family have always been Whig, and Sir George invariably acts with that party’.
The septugenarian soldier reluctantly stood his ground at the 1841 general election, as his personal influence and popularity was deemed vital to securing the return of a second Whig candidate against strong Conservative opposition.
