A Conservative landed gentleman, Burr did little of note in his only parliament after his return for Hereford in 1837. Liberal critics sarcastically commented on his silence in the House, saying that ‘Hereford has made him honourable, but … he has not made himself audible’.
The son of a soldier in the East India Company’s army, Burr inherited a portion of the Herefordshire estates of Frances, dowager duchess of Norfolk, on the death of his mother in 1836.
Burr does not appear to have made any speeches nor to have served on any select committees. He divided with the Conservatives in the key party votes on Canadian policy and Irish church reform, 7 Mar., 15 May 1838, and supported Henry Goulburn for the speakership, 27 May 1839. He repeatedly cast votes against the repeal of the corn laws and also the ballot. He opposed the second reading of the poor law amendment bill, 8 Feb. 1841, and also that every order of the commissioners should be ‘deemed a general rule’, 26 Mar. 1841. After voting in the majorities that defeated Baring’s budget and Melbourne’s government on the motion of no confidence, 18 May, 4 June 1841, Burr stood for re-election at Hereford.
Burr’s voting behaviour was little different to other Conservative MPs who had been elected on an anti-poor law platform in 1837, and who had contented themselves with occasional votes against the commission’s powers. Unfortunately for Burr, his parliamentary record on this issue was subjected to searching scrutiny and criticism by George Robert Wythen Baxter, a native of Hereford and author of the famous anti-new poor law tract The Book of the Bastilles (1841). Spurred into action by a handbill issued by Burr’s party declaring ‘No Bastilles’, Baxter published a comprehensive summary of Burr’s absences from important divisions on the poor law.
In 1849 Burr purchased the Aldermaston estate in Berkshire from the Congreve family and erected a ‘magnificent new mansion in the antique style’.
Burr made no further attempt to re-enter Parliament. On his death in 1885 after a ‘painful surgical operation’, he was succeeded by his eldest son Higford, who assumed the old family name of Higford, and inherited Aldermaston and a personal estate sworn under £106,083.
