Du Cane, who sat briefly for Maldon before coming in for Essex North in 1857, was one of the most prominent and indefatigable opponents of Gladstone’s economic policies in the 1860s. A descendent of Flemish Huguenots who had settled at Braxted in Essex early in the eighteenth century, he was born in 1825 at Ryde in the Isle of Wight, where his namesake father served as a royal navy commander of the coastguard.
At the 1852 general election Du Cane was brought forward by local Conservatives for the small Essex borough of Maldon.
Du Cane did not have to wait too long for a return to the Westminster fold. In March 1856 the Essex North Conservatives choose him to replace Sir John Tyrell, the county’s longest-serving Member who intended to retire at the dissolution.
Du Cane’s first known speech in the Commons, on the election expenses bill, was a hesitant one, in which his attempts to explain his opposition to prohibiting payment for the conveyance of voters were drowned out by repeated calls for him to withdraw, 10 June 1857. He fared better the following year, when in a lengthy, confident contribution, he outlined the deficiencies in the ‘worse than useless’ agricultural statistics bill, 28 Apr. 1858. With his next speech, he made his mark in the Commons. Moving the amendment against Locke King’s county franchise bill, he delivered a fluent critique of a measure he felt to be ‘a perfect mountain of anomaly and inconsistency’, for which he was congratulated by his colleague Charles Miles, who described him in the chamber as ‘a great accession’ to the House.
Du Cane was a frequent attender and after opposing Palmerston’s conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858, he voted steadily with the new Conservative government. In a thoughtful speech which dwelt on the inherently contested nature of parliamentary reform, he argued that the Derby ministry’s reform bill should be allowed to go into committee, where its objectionable features could be amended, 31 Mar. 1859. At the subsequent general election following the bill’s defeat, he offered a strong defence of Derby’s leadership and was again returned without a contest.
In his second full Parliament, Du Cane loyally followed Disraeli into the division lobby on the major issues of the day and enhanced his reputation as a ‘very eloquent and lucid speaker’.
Du Cane reserved his most pugnacious contributions for debates on the Liberal government’s budgets, becoming a perennial thorn in the side of Gladstone’s economic proposals. He opposed the 1860 budget on three grounds: the re-imposition of a higher rate of income tax would leave the country worse off; the reduction and abolition of duties on wine and paper were uncalled for; and the commercial treaty with France was completely ‘one-sided’. He was particularly aggrieved that the French treaty was presented as part of the budget, declaring that ‘if the constitution of Parliament and the country can stand the dose, it must make up its mind from henceforth to swallow anything’.
Diz and Du,
Made motions to
Knock over the ministers’ budget,
The House felt bored,
Pert Diz was floored,
And Du was driven to trudge it.
Punch, 3 Mar. 1860.
Undeterred by this setback, Du Cane remained a vociferous critic of Gladstone, both inside and outside the House. After somewhat reluctantly accepting the existence of a budget surplus, he attacked the Liberal leader’s decision to use the 1861 customs and inland revenue bill to abolish paper duty, 16 May 1861. At a speech at Castle Hedingham, Essex, in October 1862, he compared the chancellor of the exchequer to ‘little wanton boys’ who ‘swim on bladders in a sea of glory ... far beyond their depth’.
Although Du Cane was popular with the Conservative leadership at Westminster, his standing amongst his tenants was damaged by accusations that he unfairly protected his game at Braxted Park. The dispute momentarily caused him to search for an alternative seat at the dissolution, until the local party rallied to his defence.
With parliamentary reform firmly back on the political agenda, Du Cane lost little time in attacking the Liberal ministry’s proposals, arguing that a £14 county franchise would destroy the representation of the landed interest, and that a redistribution of seats would only serve to aggravate such an injustice, 31 May 1866.
With the Conservatives back in power, Du Cane was made a lord of the admiralty in Derby’s third administration.
Du Cane proved to be a largely successful governor, promoting the extension of public education and free trade. His desire to travel widely round the colony endeared him to the locals and his energetic lecturing, delivered in his usual style, mixing metaphors with ‘classical erudition’, was widely reported by the Australian press. He retired from the post in November 1874.
Du Cane died at Braxted Park in February 1889. He was remembered as a ‘very popular county magnate’, whose political skills had been widely appreciated by the Conservative leadership at Westminster.
