b. 1826-07-21
               
               d. 1893-04-21
               
               
                  
                  Lord Edward Henry Stanley was born on 21 July 1826. Educated at Rugby and Trinity
                     College, Cambridge, he received his MA in 1848. On 22 December 1848 he was elected
                     to represent King's Lynn in the House of Commons, remaining there until he succeeded
                     to the earldom in October 1869 at which time he entered the House of Lords as 
Lord Derby.
He travelled widely and wrote about his experiences. His father, 
Edward George Geoffrey Smith-Stanley, 
Lord Derby, led the government in 1852 and appointed his son under secretary of state for foreign
                     affairs, where he remained until December of that year, when the government fell.
                     In February 1858, Stanley became secretary of state for the colonies, and, in June,
                     moved to the India board. With the passage of the India Bill, Stanley became the first
                     secretary of state for India but left office again in June 1859.
When 
Lord Derby returned to power again in 1866, Stanley entered the foreign office, continuing in
                     that post after 
Lord Derby's retirement in February 1868; however, Stanley eventually resigned in December of
                     that year. In February 1874, as 
Lord Derby, he joined 
Disraeli's government as foreign secretary.
On 28 March 1878, he resigned from government and from the House of Lords, opposing
                     the Conservative government's policies. On 12 March 1880 he severed all connection
                     with the Conservative party and from 1882 to 1885 served as secretary of state for
                     the colonies in Gladstone's administration. He was knighted in 1884.
                  
                  In 1886, he changed his political allegiance again, joining the Liberal Unionists
                     and representing them in the Lords. He retired from public life in 1890 and died on
                     21 April 1893 of influenza at his home in Knowsley.