Peck, as Buckley was originally known, was the illegitimate son of the Manchester businessman Edmund Buckley (I) (1780-1867), Conservative MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme, 1841-7, by Sarah Peck, of Manchester.
You mentioned my refusing your going into the Army, I did this out of respect to your health for I was pretty certain in my own mind you could not stand the wet and cold and the wear and tear of what is required [,] besides you were always my greatest favourite and I felt much for you hoping that you would succeed me in everything and stand high in society.
Edmund Buckley to Edmund Peck, 28 Oct. 1859, qu. in F.S. Stancliffe, John Shaw’s, 1738-1938 (1938), 294.
His father, however, did permit Edmund to run some of his works, especially as he thought that his brother John Peck ‘cannot manage them’.
Buckley’s father had been a very popular figure in Newcastle-under-Lyme, and in 1865 Buckley offered for the constituency as a ‘Liberal Conservative’, voicing opposition to the ballot and ‘the lowering of the franchise’, which he believed would ultimately lead to universal suffrage. However, he denied ‘the charge made against the Conservative party that they were stand-still politicians’.
Buckley does not appear to have spoken, or served on any committees during his first parliament. He divided in favour of the reduction and eventual repeal of malt duty, 17 Apr. 1866. In the debates on reform Buckley generally voted with the Conservative leadership. He backed Earl Grosvenor’s amendment to block the Liberal government’s reform bill without redistribution, 27 Apr. 1866, and Lord Dunkellin’s amendment for a rateable, instead of a rental, franchise, 18 June 1866. The following year he opposed enfranchising compound householders, lodgers and women, 12 Apr. 1867, 13, 20 May 1867, and giving county votes to urban copyholders and leaseholders, 24 June 1867. In 1868 he opposed Gladstone’s plan to disestablish the Irish church.
Buckley was granted a baronetcy by Disraeli in December 1868. He was re-elected for Newcastle-under-Lyme in 1868 and 1874. In May 1876 Buckley filed for bankruptcy in Manchester County Court. His liabilities were reputed to be £500,000 and the ‘losses are said to arise from speculations on [the] Stock Exchange’.
