Though a wealthy aristocrat, Acland became the Liberal candidate for the industrial
constituency of Rotherham. The incongruity was increased by the fact that the
Yorkshire town was several hundred miles from Acland's home in
Devon. Nonetheless, he was easily elected in 1885 and remained Member of Parliament for Rotherham until the end of his political career in 1899. Acland became one of the principal sponsors of the 1889 Welsh Intermediate Education Act, making the
County Councils in Wales responsible for education – a reform not introduced in England until 1902. In 1892,
William Ewart Gladstone appointed Acland
Vice-President of the Council of Education, with a seat in the cabinet. His cabinet status gave him effective control of the educational authorities (The
Council President,
Lord Kimberley, was a figurehead). He was sworn of the
Privy Council at the same time. Acland's principal legislative achievements were both enacted in 1893: The Elementary Education (Blind and Deaf Children) Act, and the Elementary Education (School Attendance) Act (which made education compulsory up to the age of eleven). The same year, he promulgated the Evening Continuation School Code, which laid the foundation for adult education, and issued Circular 321, which required inspectors to submit a report to the Education Department about the condition of buildings and apparatus in each public elementary school. Acland's physical and mental health were not equal to the tasks he undertook, and his ill health continued after he left office after the Liberals' defeat in the
General Election of 1895. Although re-elected, he effectively resigned from Parliament in 1899 by requesting appointment to the position of
Steward of the Manor of Northstead, a nominal office of profit under the Crown. ==Later life and other honours==