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CHARLES BULLER (1806–1848)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 788 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHARLES BULLER (1806–1848)  ,
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English politician, son of Charles Buller (d . 1848), a member of a well-known Cornish
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family (see below), was born in
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Calcutta on the 6th of August 18o6; his
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mother, a daughter of General William Kirkpatrick, was an exceptionally talented woman . He was educated at
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Harrow, then privately in
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Edinburgh by Thomas Carlyle, and afterwards at Trinity College, Cambridge, becoming a
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barrister in 1831 . Before this date, however, he had succeeded his
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father as member of parliament for West
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Looe; after the passing of the Reform
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Bill of 1832 and the consequent disenfranchisement of this borough, he was returned to parliament by the voters of
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Liskeard . He retained this seat until he died in
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London on the 20th of November 1848, leaving behind him, so Charles Greville says, " a memory cherished for his delightful social qualities anda vast credit for undeveloped powers." An eager reformer and a friend of John Stuart Mill, Buller voted for the
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great Reform Bill, favoured other progressive
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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 1838 he went to
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Canada with Lord Durham as privatesecretary, and after rendering conspicuous service to his chief, returned with him to England in the same
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year . After practising as a barrister, Buller was made judge-advocate-general in 1846, and became chief
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commissioner of the poor law about a year before his
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death . For a long time it was believed that Buller wrote Lord Durham's famous " Report on the affairs of
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British North
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America." However, this is now denied by. sevetai 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 . Buller was a very talented man, witty, popular and generous, and is described by Carlyle as " the genialest radical I have ever met." Among his intimate friends were Grote, Thackeray, Monckton Milnes and Lady Ashburton . A bust of Buller is in Westminster Abbey, and another was unveiled at Liskeard in 1905 .

He wrote " A

Sketch of Lord Durham's
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mission to Canada," which has not been printed . See T . Carlyle, Reminiscences (1880; and S . J . Reid,
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Life and Letters of theist
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earl of Durham (1906) .

End of Article: CHARLES BULLER (1806–1848)
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