‘A consistent politician of the old Liberal stamp’, Buller, a country gentleman and county member, offered staunch support to successive Whig and Liberal governments.
Buller was born into the Devon gentry, but inherited Dilhorne Hall in Staffordshire from his maternal grandfather. His elder brother Sir John Yarde Buller, 3rd baronet (1799-1871), succeeded to the family title and estates in 1833 and was Conservative MP for South Devon from 1835 until he was ennobled as 1st baron Churston in 1858.
Buller voted with Whig ministers in favour of the Irish church temporalities bill, 11 Mar. 1833, and against Matthias Attwood’s motion for currency reform, 24 Apr. 1833. He did not support proposals to reduce malt duty to relieve agriculturalists, as this would have risked ‘the greatest degree of financial embarrassment’ and damaged the ‘public credit’.
Buller was returned unopposed at the 1835 general election, after publicly affirming that he remained committed to agricultural protection, but with ‘fair and reasonable duties’ on corn. He declared that he had the ‘highest respect’ for Peel, but described the premier’s supporters as ‘the most illiberal in politics, and most intolerant in religion’.
Buller had the honour of moving the address, 5 Feb. 1839, his speech largely a paean to the Whig government’s record, although he again called for the ‘modification’ of the corn laws.
In the debates on financial policy in 1842-3, Buller continued to press for a fixed duty on corn, while opposing the reintroduction of the income tax.
Buller retired from Stafford to contest North Staffordshire at the 1847 general election, but was defeated in controversial circumstances as the wife of the leading Whig magnate was duped into giving the support of her absent husband to a relative, who subsequently revealed himself to be a protectionist, rather than to Buller. Incensed by his treatment, Buller’s nomination speech was ‘intemperate and gave offence to many who would otherwise have supported him’.
Buller was given a baronetcy in January 1866 and assumed the additional name of Manningham, the surname of his late first wife. He fulfilled an election pledge by voting for the reduction and ultimate repeal of malt duty, 17 Apr. 1866, and subsequently served on an inquiry that in 1868 recommended the abolition of the duty provided that an alternative source of revenue could be identified.
Manningham-Buller was re-elected at the 1868 general election but retired at the following election in 1874. On his death in 1882 he was succeeded by his elder son Sir Morton Edward Manningham-Buller, 2nd baronet (1825-1910). On the latter’s death the title passed to his nephew, Sir Mervyn Edward Manningham-Buller, 3rd baronet (1876-1856), Conservative MP for Kettering 1924-9, and Northampton 1931-40.
