Euston was an archetypal Grafton. Like his ancestors, he had a passion for horseracing and was zealously committed to the hunt.
At the 1847 general election Euston was put up on the family interest for Thetford, a small borough on the edge of their extensive Norfolk and Suffolk estates. In 1842 his father’s return for the borough at the previous year’s general election had been declared void, bringing to an end thirty-six uninterrupted years of representation by a member of the Grafton dynasty.
Euston attended the Commons infrequently and is not known to have sat on any select committees during his sixteen year tenure as Member for Thetford.
At the 1852 general election Euston was equivocal on the policy of free trade and gave lukewarm support to an extension of the franchise.
Returned unopposed at the 1857 general election, Euston justified his vote on the Chinese question, explaining that, while he deplored the ‘extreme measures’ the British authorities had taken at Canton, Palmerston was the right leader ‘for the present exigencies of the State’.
Euston voted for the Liberal amendment to the address, 10 June 1859, and on the rare occasions on which he troubled the division lobbies thereafter, he supported Palmerston’s third administration. He voted for the abolition of church rates, 14 May 1862, having previously opposed the measure.
Euston succeeded as the sixth duke of Grafton on his father’s death in March 1863. In his farewell address to Thetford’s electors, he stated that:
Unpledged to any particular party, though favouring Liberal views, it has been my wish to frame my conduct rather according to the measures themselves, than to the party who promoted them.
Norfolk Chronicle, 11 Apr. 1863.
He also succeeded to the mastership of the Grafton hounds in Northamptonshire, remaining an avid huntsman for the rest of his life.
Grafton died at his London residence at Grosvenor Place in May 1882 following a short bout of typhoid.
