:''This article is about the British Prime Minister. For the English scientist, see
William Petty.''
'William Petty-FitzMaurice, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne',
KG,
PC (
2 May 1737 –
7 May 1805), known as 'The Earl of Shelburne' between
1761 and
1784, by which title he is generally known to history, was a
British Whig statesman who was the first
Home Secretary in
1782 and then
Prime Minister 1782 –
1783.
He was born 'William FitzMaurice' in
Dublin in
Ireland, the first son of
John FitzMaurice, who was the second surviving son of the
1st Earl of Kerry. Lord Kerry had married Anne Petty, the daughter of Sir
William Petty, Surveyor-General of Ireland, whose elder son had been created Baron Shelburne in
1688 and (on the elder son's death) whose younger son had been created Baron Shelburne in
1699 and Earl of Shelburne in
1719. On the younger son's death the Petty estates passed to the aforementioned John FitzMaurice, who changed his branch of the family's surname to "Petty" in place of "FitzMaurice", and was created Viscount FitzMaurice later in
1751 and Earl of Shelburne in
1753 (after which his elder son was styled 'Viscount FitzMaurice').
FitzMaurice spent his childhood "in the remotest parts of the south of Ireland,"
[1] and, according to his own account, when he entered
Christ Church, Oxford, in
1755, he had "both everything to learn and everything to unlearn". From a tutor whom he describes as "narrow-minded" he received advantageous guidance in his studies, but he attributes his improvement in manners and in knowledge of the world chiefly to the fact that, as was his "fate through life", he fell in "with clever but unpopular connexions".
Shortly after leaving the university he served in
Wolfe's regiment during the
Seven Years' War, and so distinguished himself at
Minden and
Kloster-Kampen that he was raised to the rank of
Colonel and appointed
Aide-de-Camp to the King (
1760). Being thus brought into near communication with
Lord Bute, he was in 1761 employed by that nobleman to negotiate for the support of
Lord Holland. He was returned to the
House of Commons as member for Wycombe, but in 1761 he succeeded his father as '2nd Earl of Shelburne' in the
Peerage of Ireland and '2nd Baron Wycombe' in the
Peerage of Great Britain. Though he declined to take office under Bute he undertook negotiations to induce
Henry Fox to gain the consent of the Commons to the peace of
1763. Fox affirmed that he had been duped, and, although Shelburne always asserted that he had acted in thorough good faith, Bute spoke of the affair as a "pious fraud".
Shelburne joined the
Grenville ministry in 1763 as
First Lord of Trade, but, failing in his efforts to include
Pitt in the Cabinet, he in a few months resigned office. Having moreover on account of his support of Pitt on the question of
Wilkes's expulsion from the House of Commons incurred the displeasure of the King, he retired for a time to his estate. After Pitt's return to power in
1766 he became
Southern Secretary, but during Pitt's illness his conciliatory policy towards America was completely thwarted by his colleagues and the King, and in
1768 he was dismissed from office.
In June
1768 the General Court incorporated the district of
Shelburne, Massachusetts from the area formerly known as "Deerfield Northeast" and in
1786 the district became a town. The town was named in honour of Lord Shelburne, who, in return sent a church bell, which never reached the town.
In
1782 he consented to take office under
Lord Rockingham on condition that the King would recognise the
United States. On the death of Lord Rockingham in the same year he became Prime Minister; but the secession of Fox and his supporters led to the famous coalition of Fox with
Lord North, which caused his resignation in the following April, his fall being perhaps hastened by his plans for the reform of the public service. He had also in contemplation a Bill to promote free commercial intercourse between England and the United States. When Pitt acceded to office in 1784, Shelburne, instead of receiving a place in the Cabinet, was created 'Marquess of Lansdowne'. Though giving a general support to the policy of Pitt, he from this time ceased to take an active part in public affairs.
During his lifetime Lord Lansdowne was blamed for insincerity and duplicity, and he incurred the deepest unpopularity, but the accusations came chiefly from those who were dissatisfied with his preference of principles to party, and if he had had a more unscrupulous regard to his personal ambition, his career as a statesman would have had more outward success. He was cynical in his estimates of character, but no statesman of his time possessed more enlightened political views, while his friendship with those of his contemporaries eminent in science and literature must be allowed considerable weight in qualifying our estimate of the moral defects with which he has been credited.
Family
Lord Lansdowne was twice married:
First to
Lady Sophia Carteret (
26 August 1745-
5 January 1771), daughter of the
1st Earl Granville, through whom he obtained the Lansdowne estates near
Bath. They had at least one child:
★
John Henry Petty, 2nd Marquess of Lansdowne (
6 December 1765–
15 November 1809), who sat in the House of Commons for twenty years as member for Chipping Wycombe before inheriting his father's marquessate. He married Mary Arabella Maddox (died
24 April 1833), the daughter of Rev. Hinton Maddox and the widow of Duke Gifford, on
27 May 1805; they had no sons.
Secondly to
Lady Louisa FitzPatrick (
1755–
7 August 1789), daughter of the
1st Earl of Upper Ossory. They had at least two children:
★
Henry Petty-FitzMaurice, 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne, who succeeded his half-brother in the title.
★ Lady Louisa FitzMaurice (born bef.
1789)
Lord Shelburne's Government, July 1782 – April 1783
★ Lord Shelburne -
First Lord of the Treasury and
Leader of the House of Lords
★
Lord Thurlow -
Lord Chancellor
★
Lord Camden -
Lord President of the Council
★
The Duke of Grafton -
Lord Privy Seal
★
Thomas Townshend -
Secretary of State for the Home Department and
Leader of the House of Commons
★
Lord Grantham -
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
★
Lord Keppel -
First Lord of the Admiralty
★
Henry Seymour Conway -
Commander in Chief of the Forces
★
The Duke of Richmond -
Master-General of the Ordnance
★
William Pitt -
Chancellor of the Exchequer
★
Lord Ashburton -
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
'Changes'
★ January 1783 -
Lord Howe succeeds Lord Keppel at the Admiralty.
Titles from birth to death
★ Mr. William FitzMaurice (
1737-
1751)
★ Mr. William Petty (
1751)
★ The Hon. William Petty (
1751-
1753)
★ Viscount FitzMaurice (
1753-
1760)
★ Viscount FitzMaurice, MP (
1760-
1761)
★ The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Shelburne (
1761-
1763)
★ The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Shelburne, PC (
1763-
1782)
★ The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Shelburne, KG, PC (
1782-
1784)
★ The Most Hon. The Marquess of Lansdowne, KG, PC (
1784-
1805)
See also
★
Lansdowne portrait
References
1. Childhood in the remotest parts of the south of Ireland probably refers to the family estates in County Kerry. The Pettys owned the Lansdowne Estates in the Kenmare area in South Kerry and the Fitzmaurice estates were in the Lixnaw area in North Kerry.
External links
★
More about William Petty, Earl of Shelburne on the Downing Street website.
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★