Described by a contemporary as ‘a dissipated and unprincipled young nobleman’ and by an unsympathetic historian as ‘a syphilitic alcoholic wastrel’, Adolphus ‘Dolly’ Vane was the third son of Charles William Stewart, third marquess of Londonderry.
At the 1852 general election Vane was brought forward by his father for Durham City. The campaign was fractious, with one particularly scathing commentary in the Liberal-supporting press describing Vane as ‘a guardsman with manners and habits and morals scarcely so elevated as his class usually is’.
Vane’s first parliamentary session was a perfunctory one. Following a petition against his return, 20 Dec. 1852, he was found guilty, by his agents, of bribery, and his election was declared void, 8 June 1853.
Vane’s return to the Commons was swift. At a by-election in April 1854 he seamlessly replaced his elder brother, viscount Seaham (who had been elevated to the Lords following the death of their father) as Conservative member for Durham North. In the autumn of that year, however, he took a leave of absence from his parliamentary duties to join his regiment on the Crimean front. Present at the siege of Sebastopol in November 1854, he wrote his mother a series of letters from the front, giving her ‘deplorable accounts’ of the soldiers’ predicament.
Vane followed Disraeli into the division lobby on most major issues, but he voted with Palmerston against Cobden’s censure motion on Canton, 3 Mar. 1857.
Vane’s experiences in the Crimea coloured his frequent contributions to debate on military issues. He attacked Palmerston for proposing to increase the government’s spending on army barracks at Aldershot, arguing that the men who had fared better in the Crimea were those who had been left to their own resources, 5 June 1857. For Vane, training soldiers under ‘permanent shelter’ constituted a ‘paternal rule’ that would ‘disgust the soldier with the service’. He also called for a reform of army pensions, revealing that officers severely wounded in the Crimea could not claim one, which was ‘not a principle on which a great country like this ought to act’, 8 June 1857, and he harassed ministers over the case of officers of the land transport corps who had not received half-pay following its abolition, 23 Apr., 26 July 1858, 14 Feb., 4 July 1859.
By 1860 Vane’s mental health had deteriorated. In April that year he married Lady Susan Clifton, daughter of the duke of Newcastle, but ‘he trembled so much during the ceremony that [the congregation] expected a fit’.
Evidently in improved health, Vane visited the United States in August 1861 and thereafter became an outspoken supporter of the Confederacy.
In 1863 Vane’s attacks of mania became more frequent, and on his doctor’s orders he was removed from the family home in the interests of ‘his wife’s life and safety’.
