‘A many-sided man’, Grant Duff (as he was generally known) was a cosmopolitan Liberal politician and intellectual who had a strong belief in the inevitable tide of progress.
Grant Duff had a striking appearance, with bright red hair and beard. Despite his broad knowledge and intellect he was not always effective in debate. In 1864 Sir John Trelawny, Liberal MP for Tavistock, wrote:
Grant Duff could not get a hearing. What an odd intellectual ferret it is! Clever, cultivated & industrious (I fancy) – why does he not succeed? Is he conceited? or does he not read his House well?
The parliamentary diaries of Sir John Trelawny, 1858-1865, ed. T.A. Jenkins (1990), 281.
He was a regular and occasionally long speaker. From the early 1860s he typically spoke ten to twenty times a session.
Grant Duff was the son and heir of James Cuninghame Grant Duff, the 5th laird of Eden, Aberdeenshire, a minor Scottish gentleman.
Between 1859 and 1866 Grant Duff travelled extensively around Europe, which was undertaken ‘mainly as a part of my political education’.
Although Grant Duff did not ‘feel entire or absolute sympathy’ with Palmerston’s government, he supported it largely for its management of foreign policy. In his 1859 speech during the debate on the address he had lambasted the ‘extraordinary incapacity’ of Derby’s ministry over foreign affairs.
However, his support for European liberalism was tempered with realism. He expressed sympathy for the Polish revolt in the early 1860s, but thought the British government was right not to offer false hope to a rebellion that was about to be crushed by the Russians.
While Grant Duff concurred in the foreign policy of the Liberal government from 1859 to 1866, he was increasingly frustrated at the lack of a progressive domestic policy.
Grant Duff repeatedly took the initiative in pressing for meritocratic reforms. He moved unsuccessfully for a parliamentary inquiry into the diplomatic service, 19 June 1860. Serving on the committee appointed the following year he proposed introducing ‘a very guarded system of competitive examination’.
Most significantly Grant Duff secured the appointment of the royal commission on public schools, better known as the Clarendon commission, in 1861. While Grant Duff promoted meritocratic reform generally, he argued that this was particularly important for educational institutions. He prepared the ground by circulating a paper to other MPs and corresponding with leading politicians including Sir George Lewis, Gladstone and Sir Stafford Northcote, as well as Thomas Arnold, headmaster of Rugby school.
Between 1863 and 1868 Grant Duff was one of the sponsors of bills to abolish the Anglican tests for Oxford University, his alma mater.
Grant Duff favoured an extension of the franchise to ‘considerably, but not overwhelmingly’ increase the ‘democratic element in our political system’.
Grant Duff was sometimes embarrassed when he strayed outside his areas of expertise. When he proposed that the seat of government in India be moved from Calcutta due to the climate’s affect on Europeans, he was swiftly contradicted by many of the old India hands in the House, 27 June 1862. His denigration of the speaking style of Charles Wood, long-serving secretary of state for India, 21 July 1864, was not calculated to increase his influence with the front bench. He was also unwise to call attention to a speech of Disraeli’s at Merchant Taylors’ Hall, which he claimed was ‘wild’ and insulting to the foreign policy of the previous Liberal government, 12 June 1868. Gladstone thought it regrettable that the issue had raised at all.
Grant Duff served as under-secretary of state for India in Gladstone’s first government, 1868-74, and as under-secretary of state for the colonies from 1880 until 1881 when Gladstone appointed him governor of Madras.
