Viscount Alexander’s short career in Parliament was confined almost exclusively to providing Sir Robert Peel with support in the division lobbies of the Commons. A serving army officer, he was absent in Canada when in April 1839 he was, as an Irish Member, obliged to give up his seat on succeeding to his father’s Irish peerage and estates.
Of Scottish origin, Alexander’s family had been successful Londonderry merchants who had made their fortune in the service of the East India Company. His grandfather, James Alexander (1730-1802), sat for Londonderry in the Irish Parliament, 1775-90, and acquired a large estate in county Tyrone, which in 1817 was valued at £200,000.
Alexander was born in London and joined the Coldstream Guards in May 1833.
After serving as high sheriff of county Armagh in 1836, Alexander came forward again for County Tyrone on ‘moderate Conservative principles’ at the 1837 general election.
Alexander is not known to have spoken in debate and does not appear to have served on any select committees. On his intermittent visits to the division lobby he sided consistently with the Conservatives, voting against the second reading of the controverted elections bill, 27 Nov. 1837, and backing Peel’s resolution on the civil pensions list, 8 Dec. In the following session he voted for the Irish poor law bill to be considered in committee, 9 Feb. 1838, and divided against the ballot, 15 Feb., and later that month voted against the third reading of the parliamentary electors bill, and endorsed the reprimand of Daniel O’Connell for breach of privilege. After backing Lord Sandon’s motion blaming the government for the rebellion in Canada, 7 Mar., he left London on 28 March with the 2nd battalion of the Coldstream Guards for service in North America.
Alexander returned to the Commons a year later, and voted against a motion to consider the corn laws, 18 Mar. 1839. Early the following month, after voting in a total of just 23 divisions in his Commons career, he vacated his seat upon succeeding to his father’s Irish earldom.
In 1845 Alexander married Charlotte Grimston (1825-88), a daughter of the earl of Verulam, and a niece of the former prime minister, Lord Liverpool, who served as a lady of the bedchamber, 1858-78.
After several months of declining health Alexander died in London in June 1855 and was buried at the church at Caledon, county Tyrone.
