Percy, a highly decorated war hero, was a member of one of the north-east of England’s most prestigious and wealthy political families. Born at Burwood House in Cobham, Surrey, he was the youngest son of George Percy, who had represented the rotten borough of Bere Alston from 1799 until his succession as the 2nd earl of Beverley in 1830.
Percy’s military career began in 1836 when he joined the Grenadier Guards. His first active service was in Canada during the 1838 insurrection. In 1854 he went to the Crimea, where his conduct in the field won him widespread acclaim.
At the 1865 general election Percy offered as a Conservative at Northumberland North in place of his brother, Lord Lovaine, who, following the succession of their father to the dukedom, had resigned his seat, citing ‘the pressure of new duties’.
A steady attender, Percy backed the Conservative party leadership on all the major issues of the day. He voted against the Liberal government’s reform bill, 27 Apr. 1866, and followed Disraeli into the division lobby on the main clauses of the Derby ministry’s representation of the people bill. He also opposed the ballot, and when Henry Berkeley, a prominent supporter of the measure, suggested that Earl Percy (as Lord Lovaine was now known) had abused his position as owner of Albury Park to interfere in a recent election at Guildford, Percy attacked Berkeley for attempting to secure support for the ballot on the basis of ‘unfounded statements picked up from the gossip of a county town’.
Percy, who ‘did not aspire to take any active part in debates’, devoted his handful of known speeches to military questions.
Prior to the 1868 dissolution Percy announced his intention not to seek re-election, citing his preference for returning to the army.
Percy died unexpectedly and without issue at his London residence in Eaton Square in December 1877. Although he had been continually suffering from neuralgia, the official cause of death was angina pectoris.
