The sixth longest surviving MP of the first reform era, Stopford was elected uncontested as a Conservative at the 1867 Northamptonshire North by-election after polling last at Northampton in 1865. He was a silent member during the period, but exhibited some dissent over the details of Disraeli’s reform bill.
Stopford, whose mother had been the niece and heiress of the fifth and final duke of Dorset, was educated at Eton and Christ Church, where he completed a B.A. in Law and Modern History. He was admitted to the Inner Temple in 1863 but was never called to the bar, and graduated with an M.A. from Christ Church, Oxford in 1865.
Stopford made no recorded speeches during his first brief parliament, but he maintained an average attendance of the division lobbies, voting in 115 out of 330 divisions and serving on three private bill committees.
Stopford name was changed by royal licence to Stopford-Sackville in 1870 and he continued to represent Northamptonshire North – speaking occasionally in the Commons – until his defeat in 1880. He unsuccessfully contested the Bosworth division of Leicestershire in 1885 and North Cambridgeshire at the 1894 by-election. He was eventually re-elected as a Conservative in 1900 for the single-member division of Northamptonshire North, but was defeated in 1906. Outside parliament he ‘devoted practically the whole of his life to public work in Northamptonshire’, serving as a commanding officer of the Northamptonshire militia, magistrate, chairman and vice chairman of quarter sessions and chairman of the county council from 1889.
