Educated at Eton College and Christ Church, Oxford, Buckingham first entered the House
of Commons in
1846 and a Conservative ministry in
1852. Though a defender of the landed interests, he served as chairman of the London and
North-Western Railway Company from
1853 to 1861, which caused
Newcastle to offer him the position of governor-general of the Province of Canada. Raised to the peerage in
1861, he became secretary of state for the colonies in
1867 and shepherded the British North America Bill through the House of Lords. However, he refused to grant members of the Canadian Privy Council the address of
“Right Honourable,” declaring that it would be
inconvenient
if Canadian politicians gradually gained a social rank equivalent to that of English
statesmen.
With the return of Conservative government in
1874, Buckingham served as governor of Madras from
1875-1880, organizing relief for a large famine in
1876-78.