Berkeley unsuccessfully contested
Western Gloucestershire at the
1847 general election, and was elected as the
Member of Parliament (MP) for
Cheltenham at a by-election in September 1848, after the result of a by-election in June that year had been voided after an
election petition. At the
1852 general election, Berkeley stepped aside in favour of
Craven Fitzhardinge Berkeley, the winner of the 1848 by-election, but stood instead in
Evesham, where he won the seat. In early 1853 he was appointed
Parliamentary Secretary to the Poor Law Board by
Lord Aberdeen, a post he held until 1856, the last year under the premiership of
Lord Palmerston. to contest the resulting vacancy in Cheltenham. He won the Cheltenham by-election in July 1855, but held the seat for less than a year, until he resigned on 2 May 1856 (again through taking the Chiltern Hundreds), to become a
Commissioner of Customs, and office he retained until November 1886. ==Family==