James Howard Harris, 3rd Earl of Malmesbury
James Howard Harris, 3rd Earl of Malmesbury (
1807-
1889), English statesman, son of the 2nd Earl, was born on
25 March 1807, and educated at
Eton College and
Oriel College, Oxford. He led a life of travel for several years, making acquaintance with famous people; and in
1841 he had only just been elected to the
House of Commons as a
Conservative, when his father died and he succeeded to the peerage. His political career, though not one which made any permanent impression on history, attracted a good deal of contemporary attention, partly from his being
Foreign Secretary in
1852 and again in
1858—
1859 (he was also
Lord Privy Seal in
1866—
1868 and in
1874—
1876), and partly from his influential position as an active
Tory of the old school in the
House of Lords at a time when the
Earl of Derby and
Benjamin Disraeli were, in their different ways, moulding the Conservatism of the period. Moreover his long life — he survived till the
17 May 1889 — and the publication of his
Memoirs of an Ex-Minister in
1884, contributed to the reputation he enjoyed. These
Memoirs, charmingly written, full of anecdote, and containing much interesting material for the history of the time, remain his chief title to remembrance. Lord Malmesbury also edited his grandfather’s
Diaries and Correspondence (
1844), and in
1870 published
The First Lord Malmesbury and His Friends. He was succeeded as 4th earl by his nephew, Edward James Harris (1842—1899).