A businessman who was described as ‘probably the richest man in Manchester’ in 1858, Buckley sat in one parliament as Conservative MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme, where his benevolence ensured his popularity.
Buckley hailed from the West Riding gentry, his family being described as ‘landowners of no inconsiderable possessions’ in the Saddleworth area.
Buckley’s admission into John Shaw’s Club in Manchester in the 1820s ‘was a recognition not only of his business worth but also of his dependability in matters of church and state’.
Buckley’s interests in the iron trade gave him a connection with Newcastle-under-Lyme. He issued an address for the constituency at the 1837 general election, but took no further action. However, he accepted a requisition from electors in 1840 and stood at the general election the following year.
Buckley, who is not known to have spoken in debate, gave silent support to Sir Robert Peel’s 1842 revision of the corn law and reintroduction of the income tax. Despite his promises on the hustings, he was generally absent from votes on the new poor law, although he was in the minority of 58 that endorsed the ‘re-construction’ of the statute ‘as shall make it conformable to Christianity, sound policy, and the ancient Constitution of the realm’, 23 Feb. 1843. He opposed the abolition of Anglican oaths and subscriptions for Oxford and Cambridge universities and the investigation of Irish church temporalities. He rarely voted on factory regulation, but divided against Roebuck’s dogmatic motion against any legislative interference in adult working hours, 3 May 1844. Buckley wrote to Peel in the same year that ‘you will be glad to know that the iron trade is getting into a very healthy state’.
Pleading the ‘pressure of private business’, Buckley retired at the 1847 general election.
Buckley never married, but sired a number of illegitimate children. In one letter to his son Edmund Peck, who assumed his father’s patronymic in 1864, Buckley wrote that ‘you are aware that I had 16 young ones or more to bring up’.
On his death in 1867, Buckley left a personal estate sworn under £140,000 by his executors, who included his favoured son and successor Edmund Buckley (formerly Peck) (1834-1910). Usually described as the elder Buckley’s nephew in contemporary genealogies, the younger Buckley inherited the Dinas estate, Grotton Hall in Saddleworth, and valuable land in Lancashire.
