When the British government emancipated the slaves in the 1830s, the elder Charles Stuart Parker was compensated for over 400 slaves he shared ownership of on 16 estates in British Guiana.
[2] As a result of the wealth obtained by his father in sugar and slavery, the younger Charles Stuart Parker was educated at Eton and at University College, Oxford.
Parker collated and published the papers of Sir Robert Peel in 1899.
[7] He also published Life and Letters of Sir James Graham, Second Baronet of Netherby, P.C., G.C.B., 1792-1861 in 1907.
This article about a Liberal Member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom representing a Scottish constituency is a stub.