Strangways, third son of his father’s second wife, was born five months after the death of his father from ‘gout in his head’ aged 55.
Following the unexpected death of Lansdowne’s son Lord Kerry in August 1836, Strangways was brought forward as a stop-gap in their pocket borough of Calne. ‘So little interest’ was taken in his return, which was uncontested, that ‘no more than a score’ of electors attended.
Strangways was termed a ‘Whig-Radical’ on his retirement in 1841, but his only known vote of that tendency was in the minority to abolish the property qualification for MPs, 14 Feb. 1837.
Strangways died at Brickworth after ‘a short illness’ in September 1859, having become heir apparent to the earldom the previous year on his older brother William’s succession as 4th earl. Following the latter’s demise in 1865, Strangways’s eldest son and heir Henry Edward Fox Strangways (1847-1905) succeeded to the earldom and family estates.
