align="left">Moreton was born at Sherborne and came from a long-established Gloucestershire family. He was the eldest of 10 sons and 4 daughters, born to the 2nd earl Ducie, who had sat for Gloucestershire, 1831-2, and East Gloucestershire, 1832-5. He served his political apprenticeship in the salons of the Palmerstons, Howards, and Russells, engaged in such pursuits as dancing the Duchess of Bedford’s ‘Camelia’ quadrille at the Literary Association Friends of Poland annual ball.
Moreton was spoken of as a Liberal candidate for East Gloucestershire when it had appeared that a vacancy might occur in January 1851.
Moreton does not appear to have spoken in the Commons, sat on any select committees or introduced any bills. True to the political values of his family, he supported Villiers’s free trade motion, 26 Nov., and paired against Disraeli’s budget, 16 Dec. 1852. He turned out to divide in favour of the government on the Canadian clergy reserves bill, 11 Apr., and the county rates and expenditure bill, 13 Apr., and voted for the third reading of the Jewish disabilities bill, 15 Apr. 1853. He supported Gladstone’s budget resolutions, 2 May, and the subsequent amendments on income tax, 9, 12 May, but opposed the ministry by voting for the inspection of nunneries bill, 10 May, and supporting Milner Gibson’s motion for the repeal of advertising duty, 14 May 1853.
In June 1853 Moreton vacated his seat upon succeeding his father as 3rd earl of Ducie. He sat in the House of Lords for 68 years and at his death was described in The Times as the ‘Father’ of that House.
In the 1850s Moreton had been an active member of the Metropolitan Sanitary Association and the Society for Improving the Condition of the Labouring Classes, and was a fellow of several learned societies.
All his life he had been interested in military matters, and served as the captain of the Yeoman of the Guard in the 1860s and was for many years an honorary colonel of militia. He had once been ‘a clever shot’ and represented his country at the sport, later serving as president of the National Rifle Association.
The earl of Ducie died in October 1921. His only son, Henry Haughton Reynolds-Moreton (1857-1920), Liberal MP for West Gloucestershire 1880-5,
