'Charles Buller' (
6 August 1806 –
29 November 1848),
English politician, son of
Charles Buller (1774-1848), a member of a well-known
Cornish family (see below), was born in
Calcutta; his mother, Barbara Isabella Kirkpatrick, a daughter of General
William Kirkpatrick, was an exceptionally talented woman.

Funerary monument, Kensal Green Cemetery, London
He was educated at
Harrow, then privately in
Edinburgh by
Thomas Carlyle, and afterwards at
Trinity College, Cambridge, becoming a
barrister in
1831. Before this date, however, he 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 by the voters of
Liskeard. He retained this seat until he died in
London, leaving behind him, so
Charles Greville says, a memory cherished for his delightful social qualities and a vast credit for undeveloped powers.
An eager reformer and a friend of
John Stuart Mill, Buller voted for the great Reform Bill, favored 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
1838 he went to
Canada with
Lord Durham as private secretary, and after rendering conspicuous service to his chief, returned with him to England in the same year. He was briefly
Secretary to the Board of Control during 1841.
After practising as a barrister, Buller was made
Judge Advocate General in
1846, and became chief commissioner of the poor law about a year before his death. 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.
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 mission to Canada'', which has not been printed.
Monument: Kensal Green (Liberal)
See T Carlyle, ''Reminiscences'' (1881); and SJ Reid, ''Life and Letters of the 1st Earl of Durham'' (I906).
External links
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Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
References
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