The Right Honourable Charles Buller |
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Funerary monument, Kensal Green Cemetery, London
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Judge Advocate General | |
In office 8 July 1846 – 1847 |
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Monarch | Victoria |
Prime Minister | Lord John Russell |
Preceded by | Hon. James Stuart-Wortley |
Succeeded by | William Goodenough Hayter |
President of the Poor Law Board | |
In office 23 July 1847 – 29 November 1848 |
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Monarch | Victoria |
Prime Minister | Lord John Russell |
Preceded by | New office |
Succeeded by | Matthew Talbot Baines |
Personal details | |
Born |
6 August 1806 Calcutta, British India |
Died |
29 November 1848 (aged 42) London, England |
Nationality | British |
Political party | Whig |
Alma mater | Trinity College, Cambridge |
Charles Buller (6 August 1806 – 29 November 1848), was a British barrister, politician and reformer.
Born in Calcutta, British India, Buller was the son of Charles Buller (1774–1848), a member of a well-known Cornish family, and Barbara Isabella Kirkpatrick, daughter of General William Kirkpatrick, considered an exceptionally talented woman. He was educated at Harrow, then privately in Edinburgh by Thomas Carlyle, and afterwards at Trinity College, Cambridge, gaining his BA in 1828. He had been admitted to Lincoln's Inn in 1824, and became a barrister in 1831.
Before this date, however, Buller had succeeded his father as Member of Parliament for West Looe. After the passing of the Reform Bill of 1832 and the consequent disenfranchisement of this borough, he was returned to Parliament for Liskeard, a seat he retained until he died.
An eager reformer and a friend of John Stuart Mill, Buller voted for the Great Reform Bill, favoured other progressive measures, and presided over the committee on the state of the records and the one appointed to inquire into the state of election law in Ireland in 1836. In the aftermath of the Rebellions of 1837, he went to Canada in 1838 with Lord Durham as private secretary, and served in the second session of the Special Council of Lower Canada. For a long time it was believed that Buller wrote Lord Durham's famous Report on the Affairs of British North America. However, this is now denied by several authorities, among them being Durham's biographer, Stuart J Reid, who mentions that Buller described this statement as a groundless assertion in an article which he wrote for the Edinburgh Review. Nevertheless, it is quite possible that the Report was largely drafted by Buller, and it almost certainly bears traces of his influence. He also wrote A Sketch of Lord Durham's mission to Canada, which was never printed. He returned with Durham to England in the same year. Buller and Sir William Molesworth were associated with Edward Gibbon Wakefield and his schemes for colonising South Australia, Canada and New Zealand.