Styled Lord Burghley, Cecil sat for Lincolnshire South, 1847-57, and Northamptonshire North, 1857-67, as a Protectionist. Mostly silent during the first decade of his career, after being stationed in Gibraltar during the Crimean war he began to take an active and vocal interest in military matters. He subsequently served in the royal household, succeeding as 3rd marquess of Exeter in 1867.
Son of the second Marquess of Exeter and a descendant of Queen Elizabeth’s celebrated secretary of state and lord high treasurer, William Cecil, Burghley received a customary aristocratic education at Eton and Cambridge, where he graduated with an honorary M.A. in May 1847.
A generally lax attender until his final year in parliament, Burghley voted with the Protectionist leadership over most issues, but consistently opposed the removal of Jewish disabilities and any alteration to the parliamentary oath. He also voted with the grouping of protectionists and Irish landlords who sought to delay Russell’s Irish poor law amendment bill, 5 Mar. 1849. He made his only recorded speech of the parliament when seconding a motion to delay Russell’s Jewish disabilities bill, declaring that the legislation would ‘open the door to any infidel, whether heathen or Mussulman’, 7 Feb. 1848. He was an active member of the 1852 select committee on the pharmacy bill, and completed some private committee work during the parliament.
Burghley was re-elected uncontested for Lincolnshire South in 1852 after offering his continued support to Lord Derby’s government and agricultural protection, as well as his opposition to the Maynooth grant and any extension to the suffrage.
He was almost entirely absent from parliament during 1855 and 1856 on account of military service. He had entered into active command of the Northamptonshire militia in April 1854, following increased tensions in the Crimea, and was garrisoned with his division in Ireland from August 1854. He was able to return to parliament to vote in the majority for Roebuck’s motion that brought down Aberdeen’s coalition ministry, 29 Jan. 1855, before travelling to Gibraltar with his troops in February 1855. He was stationed for a year in Gibraltar, during which time he occasionally returned to England.
Burghley retired from Lincolnshire South at the dissolution after a vacancy opened in Northamptonshire North, the site of his family seat.
Prior to the collapse of the Liberal government, he divided consistently with the Conservative leadership on major issues, and paired in the majority against Palmerston’s conspiracy to murder bill, 19 Feb. 1858.
The 1859 election was the only contest of Burghley’s two-decade Commons career. He stood on a joint ticket and shared committee rooms with his fellow Conservative incumbent. In his election address he criticised an opportunistic ‘combination of parties of different political sections’ for ‘embarrassing’ the Derby administration at a time of heightened national security and for ‘preventing fair discussion’ of its reform bill.
Burghley followed the Conservative whip on major votes during the subsequent parliament. However, he sided with the ultras in the party in the minorities that sought to consider the removal of the Maynooth grant, 14 Feb. 1860, and delay Dillwyn’s motion to consider the position of the Irish church, 28 Mar. 1865. He continued to scrutinise ministers over military and foreign affairs and was a member of the select committee on militia estimates in 1861 and 1862.
Burghley was returned uncontested for Northamptonshire North in 1865 at a sparsely attended nomination. On the hustings he maintained his opposition to the removal of church rates, and held the same position on reform as in 1859, criticising Gladstone for his apparent support of manhood suffrage.
Burghley was appointed treasurer of the household in Derby’s 1866 administration, and although Kettering’s frustrated Liberals heckled him on the hustings, his re-election following his appointment to office was not contested.
