The youngest son of George Canning, whose brief tenure as prime minister ended with his death, Apr. 1827, Canning enjoyed a brief spell in the Commons before embarking on a distinguished ministerial career, culminating in his appointment as India’s first viceroy in 1858. Canning had been educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, where his contemporaries included many future Peelite colleagues, notably William Gladstone, Sidney Herbert, Edward Cardwell, and Henry Pelham Clinton, earl of Lincoln, later the 5th duke of Newcastle.
An opportunity soon arose at Warwick, where Canning, whom Raikes described as a ‘strong Conservative’, offered on the ‘Castle interest’ of the Tory earl of Warwick and defeated a reformer at the by-election, 23 Aug. 1836.
Appointed governor-general of India by Palmerston, Canning’s calm handling of the Mutiny in 1857 and his resistance to the demands for vengeance from much of the press, public and expatriates earned him the nickname ‘Clemency Canning’.
