Paget was appointed a
deputy lieutenant for
Middlesex on 6 April 1689 and
Staffordshire on 14 May 1689. He was elected Member of Parliament for
Staffordshire on 7 November 1695 as a
Tory. In 1702 he was made a deputy lieutenant for
Buckinghamshire. On 30 April 1704 Paget was appointed
one of the Council advising the
Lord High Admiral,
Prince George of Denmark, and served until the Prince's death on 28 October 1708. He was also a
Lord Commissioner of the Treasury between 10 August 1710 and 30 May 1711. On 13 June 1711 he was appointed
Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard, being made a
Privy Counsellor the next day and being raised to the
House of Lords as
Baron Burton, of
Burton in the
County of Stafford, on
1 January 1712. On 26 February 1713 he succeeded his father as
7th Baron Paget of Beaudesert, and was also appointed to succeed him as
Lord Lieutenant of Staffordshire. On 1 May 1714 he was appointed
Envoy Extraordinary to the
Elector of Hanover, but refused to go unless he was made an Earl, which
Queen Anne refused. However, when the Elector succeeded as King George I of Great Britain on 1 August, he raised Paget in the peerage as
Earl of Uxbridge in the County of
Middlesex, on 19 October 1714, and appointed him to the new
Privy Council, 16 November 1714. In 1727, the Town of
Uxbridge,
Massachusetts Colony, was named in honour of Henry Paget, First Earl of Uxbridge.
Later life In 1715 Lord Uxbridge ceased to be Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard and Lord Lieutenant, and took on the post of
Recorder of
Lichfield, in which he served until his death. In 1740, he became a
justice of the peace for
Cambridgeshire. ==Personal life==