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Edward Ellice (Scottish politician)

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Edward Ellice (1810-1880) was a Scottish Liberal politician.

He was the eldest son of Edward Ellice, from his first marriage to Hannah Althea Grey, the youngest sister of Earl Grey, and was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge.

In 1832, he was appointed as Private Secretary to Lord Durham for his diplomatic mission to Russia, and married Katherine Balfour in 1834.

He was an unsuccessful candidate for Inverness in the 1835 general election, and was elected to represent Huddersfield in a May 1837 by-election. In the general election that year he was elected to represent St Andrews Burghs, a seat he held until 1880.

He continued as Durham's private secretary during his term as Governor General of the Province of Canada; whilst he was working in Canada, his wife was briefly captured during the Rebellions of 1837.

He remained a backbencher throughout his political career, taking special interest in the reform of the Poor Laws. He supported the idea of "clearance", but viewed indiscriminate forcible eviction of the peasantry as "cruel and indefensible" (Spain, 2004).

He was offered a peerage by Gladstone in 1869, but declined the offer, and retired from Parliament in early 1880, shortly before his death

[edit] References

  • Oliver & Boyd's new Edinburgh almanac and national repository for the year 1850. Oliver & Boyd, Edinburgh, 1850
  • Jonathan Spain, "Ellice, Edward (1810–1880)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, May 2006 accessed 11 July 2006
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