The Archdall family had represented one of Fermanagh’s parliamentary seats since the Union, and Archdall was himself returned at nine uncontested elections, spending forty years in Parliament. He was a ‘Conservative of the old school’ and a champion of the ‘Protestant ascendancy in Ireland’, which he regarded ‘as the only real safeguard of civil and religious liberty’. At the same time, he claimed to favour ‘safe and progressive’ reforms and ‘sound economy but not unwise retrenchment’.
Archdall was the eldest of nine sons of Edward Archdall (1775-1864), the third son of Colonel Mervyn Archdall (1725-1813), of Castle Archdall, county Fermanagh, who had been MP for Fermanagh in the Irish parliament, 1761-1800, and at Westminster, 1801-2. His uncle, General Mervyn Archdall (1763-1839), subsequently sat for the county from 1802-34.
In March 1832 Archdall joined the army and as a 22 year-old cornet was returned unopposed for County Fermanagh upon the retirement of his uncle in June 1834.
Staunchly opposed to the Whig ministry’s proposals to reform the Irish Church and municipalities, Archdall nevertheless accepted the recommendations of the select committee on Orangeism, and in March 1836 signed an address which strongly recommended the dissolution of the society in Ireland.
Archdall was untroubled at the 1837 general election and that October told the county’s Conservatives that ‘the temporary predominance’ of the Whigs had been a warning ‘against the mischiefs of an intemperate desire [for] innovation’, and urged them to place their faith in the House of Lords as a bulwark against ‘the ruinous designs of the ministerial party’.
Re-elected unopposed at the ensuing general election, he gave general support to Peel’s new ministry, including his reintroduction of income tax in April 1842. The following month he sat on the select committee on the Irish drainage bill, and in April 1843 served on the inquiry into Irish medical charities.
Archdall was strongly opposed to the Maynooth grant and voted against the first reading of Peel’s bill to make its funding permanent, 3 Apr. 1845. He was among 64 Conservatives who failed to divide on the second reading, 18 Apr., but backed Ward’s proposal that the grant be drawn from the consolidated fund, 24 Apr. He presented numerous petitions against the bill from parishes within his constituency in early May, and voted against the third reading and for the sunset clause, 21 May.
Although he was prevented from attending the opening of Parliament in 1846 due to ‘severe indisposition’, Archdall opposed the repeal of the corn laws, pairing against the first and second readings of the bill, and voting against the third.
Long silent in the House, Archdall became galvanised by the Young Ireland rising of 1848 and thereafter was frequently on his feet voicing the concerns of the Orange Order, a body which he had helped to revive in 1845.
On 20 February 1849 Archdall was added to the select committee on the Irish fisheries and, having already made an ‘assault on the conduct’ of the Irish poor law commissioners in June 1848, joined the revolt of Ulster MPs against Lord John Russell’s Irish rate-in-aid bill, voting in the small minority against the government’s motion on its principle, 6 Mar. 1849.
Archdall was active at Westminster throughout the 1850s, especially on Irish matters. In February 1850 he joined a deputation which called upon the government to fund the Irish railways, and backed Disraeli’s motion on agricultural distress.
Determined to restore agricultural protection, Archdall voted against Hume’s motion for a call of the House on the question, 19 Nov. 1852, and was one of a minority of 53 die-hard protectionists, (of whom only four sat for Irish seats), who voted against Palmerston’s amendment to the free trade motion, 26 Nov. 1852.
Archdall was one of only 12 Irish MPs to vote for Spooner’s anti-Maynooth motion in 1856, and remained a relatively good attender.
Fresh from voting for Derby’s reform bill, 31 Mar. 1859, Archdall was returned without opposition at the general election and backed Derby’s ministry on the address, 10 June 1859. In February 1860 he sat on the select committee on the purification of the Serpentine, and that August voted against the second reading of the Irish party emblems bill.
In May 1864 Archdall inherited a family property that included Castle Archdall, picturesquely located on the shores of Lough Erne, and more than 29,000 acres of land in county Fermanagh. Already the fifth largest proprietor in the county, he also owned 5,600 acres in county Tyrone, which brought in a total annual rental of more than £17,000.
Untroubled at the 1865 general election, Archdall took the opportunity to express his ‘decided disapproval’ of the policies of William Gladstone.
Determined to fulfil his pledge to uphold the principles of ‘Church and State’, Archdall was one of 40 Irish MPs who divided against Sir John Gray’s motion for a reconsideration of the status of the Irish Church, 7 May 1867.
Concern about the regulation of parliamentary elections caused Archdall to question whether the means of trying election petitions was satisfactory. In April 1867 he asked whether it was advisable to ‘define the limits’ of ‘clerical interference’ in elections, and to state ‘the precise amount of violence’ required to constitute a ‘general riot’.
Reputedly popular as a landlord, Archdall actively promoted schemes for agricultural improvements and took a special interest in cattle shows and ploughing matches.
At the 1868 general election Archdall was again returned unopposed, and during 1869-70 supported William Johnston’s parliamentary campaign to repeal the Party Processions Act.
Archdall’s wife died in August 1874, and around 1882 he resumed the former spelling of the family name as Archdale. He spent his later years in ‘frail health’, regularly wintering abroad, and in December 1895 died at Cannes, where he was buried.
