Elected in controversial circumstances, Brackley’s chronic poor health prevented him from pursuing an active parliamentary career and prompted his early retirement. ‘From youth he had been sickly and partially deaf’.
Brackley’s father Lord Francis Leveson-Gower (1800-57) was the younger son of George Granville Leveson-Gower (1758-1833), 2nd marquess of Stafford and 1st duke of Sutherland, whose immense estates and industrial interests led him to be fittingly described as the ‘Leviathan of wealth’. Lord Francis represented Bletchingley, 1822-6 and Sutherland, 1826-31 in the unreformed Parliament.
At the 1847 general election Brackley was brought forward as a Peelite candidate for South Lancashire, his father’s old constituency, appealing to Whigs and Peelites who wanted a free trade MP but not one put up by the Anti-Corn Law League.
However, Edward Buller, former MP and Liberal candidate was astonished to discover that Brackley was ‘with very little disguise … the Conservative, Protectionist & No Popery candidate, & further that the whole weight of the Trentham influence would be used in his favour’.
Brackley was described by Charles Dod as a Conservative, a verdict supported by his membership of the Carlton Club.
Brackley retired due to his ‘shattered health’ in February 1851, although Sneyd noted that he was ‘as usual –gauche & wrote to apprise the Duke [of Sutherland] of his resignation, after the D. had read it in all the newspapers & after there had been public meetings held in consequence of it’.
He had always been an invalid, but his illness was not announced, and his death came to all of us as a surprise. … he took no active part in public affairs and mixed but little in society. His estates were well managed, and his affairs, I believe, properly regulated. He was always spoken of with respect in Lancs. though not personally well-known.
Derby, Disraeli and the Conservative party, 191 (20 Sept. 1862).
Both of Ellesmere’s younger brothers had parliamentary careers. Algernon Fulke Egerton (1825-91) was Conservative MP for South Lancashire, 1859-68, South East Lancashire, 1868-80, and Wigan, 1880-2. Francis Egerton (1824-95) was Liberal MP for East Derbyshire, 1868-85 and North East Derbyshire, 1885-6.
