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Edward Stanley, 2nd Baron Stanley of Alderley

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Edward John Stanley, 2nd Baron Stanley of Alderley (13 November 180216 June 1869), entered the House of Commons as Whig Member of Parliament (MP) for Hindon in 1831 and became member for North Cheshire 1832 to 1841, and 1847 to 1848. He was appointed Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department in 1841, Patronage Secretary to the Treasury from 1835 to 1841, Paymaster-General in 1841, and Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs from 1846 to 1852. In 1848, two years before he succeeded to the barony of Stanley, he was created Baron Eddisbury of Winnington. He was President of the Board of Trade from 1855 to 1858, and Postmaster-General from 1860 to 1866. In 1861 he established the Post Office Savings Bank.

His wife, Henrietta Maria (21 December 180716 February 1895), a daughter of Henry Augustus Dillon-Lee, 13th Viscount Dillon, was a remarkable woman. Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia she was a great-great-great-great-granddaughter of King Charles II by his mistress Barbara Villiers. Before her marriage in 1826 she had lived in Florence, and had attended the receptions of the Countess of Albany, the widow of Charles Edward, the Young Pretender; and in London she had great influence in social and political circles. When he was patronage secretary her husband was described by Lord Palmerston as joint-whip with Mrs Stanley. Later in life Lady Stanley of Alderley helped to found the Women's Liberal Unionist Association, and she was a strenuous worker for the higher education of women, helping to establish Girton College, Cambridge, the Girls' Public Day School Trust, and the Medical College for Women. She died on 16 February 1895.

They had ten children, of whom the eldest son and heir, a diplomat and Arabist, converted to Islam, the eldest daughter married Augustus Pitt Rivers, their second daughter was the grandmother of Winston Churchill's wife Clementine and great-grandmother of the Mitford sisters, another was the mother of the philosopher Bertrand Russell (a noted agnostic), their youngest son became Roman Catholic Bishop of Emmaus (in partibus), and the youngest daughter, as Rosalind Howard, Countess of Carlisle, became the chatelaine of Castle Howard and a radical temperance campaigner.

Political offices
Preceded by:
Viscount Howick
Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department
1834
Succeeded by:
W. Gregson
Preceded by:
Sir George Clerk, Bt
Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury
1835–1841
Succeeded by:
Sir Denis Le Marchant, Bt
Preceded by:
Sir Henry Brook Parnell, Bt
Paymaster-General
1841
Succeeded by:
Sir Edward Knatchbull, Bt
Preceded by:
George Smythe
Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
1846–1852
Succeeded by:
Austen Henry Layard
Preceded by:
The Earl Granville
Paymaster-General
Vice-President of the Board of Trade

1852
Succeeded by:
The Lord Colchester
Preceded by:
The Lord Colchester
Paymaster-General
Vice-President of the Board of Trade

1853–1855
Succeeded by:
Edward Pleydell Bouverie
Preceded by:
Edward Cardwell
President of the Board of Trade
1855–1858
Succeeded by:
Joseph Warner Henley
Preceded by:
The Earl of Elgin and Kincardine
Postmaster General
1860–1866
Succeeded by:
The Duke of Montrose
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by:
George Fortescue
John Weyland
Member for Hindon
with John Weyland

1831–1832
Succeeded by:
Constituency abolished
Preceded by:
Constituency created
Member for North Cheshire
with William Tatton Egerton

1832–1841
Succeeded by:
William Tatton Egerton
George Cornwall Legh
Preceded by:
William Tatton Egerton
George Cornwall Legh
Member for North Cheshire
with William Tatton Egerton

1847–1848
Succeeded by:
William Tatton Egerton
George Cornwall Legh
Peerage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by:
John Stanley
Baron Stanley of Alderley
1850–1869
Succeeded by:
Henry Edward John Stanley
Preceded by:
New Creation
Baron Eddisbury
1848–1869

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