Background
He was the son of Sir Thomas Lucas, 1st Baronet, decade at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was the son of Sir Thomas Lucas, 1st Baronet, decade at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.
He was private secretary to two Unionist Chief Whips, Sir William Walrond, and Aretas Akers-Douglas. After leaving the House of Commons he turned to writing. His most-highly regarded work was "George II and his Ministers", and he also published several novels.
After a painful illness, he committed suicide on 9 May 1914 at his home in London, by shooting himself with a revolver.
27th United Kingdom Parliament]
Then from 1900 to 1906 he was a Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) for Portsmouth.