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George Grenville

George Grenville (14 October 1712 – 13 November 1770) was a British Whig statesman who rose to the position of Prime Minister of Great Britain. Grenville was born into an influential political family and first entered Parliament in 1741 as an MP for Buckingham. He emerged as one of Cobham's Cubs, a group of young members of Parliament associated with Lord Cobham.

George Grenville
Portrait by William Hoare, 1764
Prime Minister of Great Britain
In office
16 April 1763 – 10 July 1765
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded byThe Earl of Bute
Succeeded byThe Marquess of Rockingham
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
16 April 1763 – 16 July 1765
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded bySir Francis Dashwood, Bt
Succeeded byWilliam Dowdeswell
Northern Secretary
In office
27 May 1762 – 9 October 1762
Prime MinisterThe Earl of Bute
Preceded byThe Earl of Bute
Succeeded byThe Earl of Halifax
Member of Parliament
for Buckingham
In office
11 June 1741 – 13 November 1770
Preceded byRichard Grenville
Succeeded byJames Grenville
Personal details
Born(1712-10-14)14 October 1712
Wotton Underwood, England
Died13 November 1770(1770-11-13) (aged 58)
Mayfair, England
Resting placeAll Saints Churchyard, Wotton Underwood
Political partyWhig (Grenvillite)
Spouse
(m. 1749; died 1769)
Children8; including George, Charlotte, Thomas and William
Parents
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford
Eton College

In 1754 Grenville became Treasurer of the Navy, a position he held twice until 1761. In October 1761 he chose to stay in government and accepted the new role of Leader of the Commons causing a rift with his brother-in-law and political ally William Pitt who had resigned. Grenville was subsequently made Northern Secretary and First Lord of the Admiralty by the new Prime Minister Lord Bute. On 8 April 1763, Lord Bute resigned, and Grenville assumed his position as Prime Minister.[1] His government tried to bring public spending under control and pursued an assertive foreign policy. His best-known policy is the Stamp Act, a long-standing tax in Great Britain which Grenville extended to the colonies in America, but which instigated widespread opposition in Britain's American colonies and was later repealed. Grenville had increasingly strained relations with his colleagues and the King. In 1765, he was dismissed by George III and replaced by Lord Rockingham. For the last five years of his life, Grenville led a group of his supporters in opposition and staged a public reconciliation with Pitt.

Coat of arms of Grenville of Wotton Underwood, Buckinghamshire: Vert, on a cross argent five torteaux

Early life

George Grenville was born at Wotton House on 14 October 1712. He was the second son of Richard Grenville and Hester Temple (later the 1st Countess Temple). He was one of five brothers, all of whom became MPs. His sister Hester Grenville married the leading political figure William Pitt. His elder brother was Richard Grenville, later the 2nd Earl Temple. It was intended by his parents that George Grenville should become a lawyer.[2] Grenville was educated at Eton College and at Christ Church, Oxford, and was called to the bar in 1735.[3]

Politics

Loyalist

 
Stowe House, Buckinghamshire, the political base of the Cobham faction. In 1749 ownership of the estate passed to Grenville's brother Richard.

He entered Parliament in 1741 as one of the two members for Buckingham, and continued to represent that borough for the next twenty-nine years until his death.[3] He was disappointed to be giving up what appeared to be a promising legal career for the uncertainties of opposition politics.[4]

In Parliament, he subscribed to the "Boy Patriot" party, which opposed Sir Robert Walpole.[3] In particular he enjoyed the patronage of Lord Cobham, the leader of a faction that included George Grenville, his brother Richard, William Pitt and George Lyttelton that became known as Cobham's Cubs.

Joins Administration

In December 1744 he became a Lord of the Admiralty in the administration of Henry Pelham. He allied himself with his brother Richard and with William Pitt (who became their brother-in-law in 1754) in forcing Pelham to give them promotion by rebelling against his authority and obstructing business. In June 1747, Grenville became a Lord of the Treasury.[3]

In 1754 Grenville was made Treasurer of the Navy and Privy Councillor. Along with Pitt and several other colleagues he was dismissed in 1755 after speaking and voting against the government on a debate about a recent subsidy treaty with Russia which they believed was unnecessarily costly, and would drag Britain into Continental European disputes. Opposition to European entanglements was a cornerstone of Patriot Whig thinking.

He and Pitt joined the opposition, haranguing the Newcastle government. Grenville and Pitt both championed the formation of a British militia to provide additional security rather than the deployment of Hessian mercenaries favoured by the government.[5] As the military situation deteriorated following the loss of Minorca, the government grew increasingly weak until it was forced to resign in Autumn 1756.

In Government with Pitt

Treasurer of the Navy

Pitt then formed a government led by the Duke of Devonshire. Grenville was returned to his position as Treasurer of the Navy, which was a great disappointment as he had been expecting to receive the more prestigious and lucrative post of Paymaster of the Forces.[6] This added to what Grenville regarded as a series of earlier slights in which Pitt and others had passed him over for positions in favour of men he considered no more talented than he was. From then on Grenville felt a growing resentment towards Pitt, and grew closer to the young Prince of Wales and his advisor Lord Bute who were both now opposed to Pitt.[7]

In 1758, as Treasurer of the Navy, he introduced and carried a bill which established a fairer system of paying the wages of seamen and supporting their families while they were at sea which was praised for its humanity if not for its effectiveness.[8] He remained in office during the years of British victories, notably the Annus Mirabilis of 1759 for which the credit went to the government of which he was a member. However his seven-year-old son died after a long illness and Grenville remained by his side at their country house in Wotton and rarely came to London.[9]

In 1761, when Pitt resigned upon the question of the war with Spain, and subsequently functioned as Leader of the House of Commons in the administration of Lord Bute.[3] Grenville's role was seen as an attempt to keep someone closely associated with Pitt involved in the government, in order to prevent Pitt and his supporters actively opposing the government. However, it soon led to conflict between Grenville and Pitt. Grenville was also seen as a suitable candidate because his reputation for honesty meant he commanded loyalty and respect amongst independent MPs.[10]

Northern Secretary

 
Lord Bute, Prime Minister between 1762 and 1763, under whom Grenville served and whom he later succeeded

In May 1762, Grenville was appointed Northern Secretary, where he took an increasingly hard line in the negotiations with France and Spain designed to bring the Seven Years' War to a close.[11]

Grenville demanded much greater compensation in exchange for the return of British conquests, while Bute favored a more generous position which eventually formed the basis of the Treaty of Paris. In spite of this, Grenville had now become associated with Bute rather than his former political allies who were even more vocal in their opposition to the peace treaty than he was. In October he was made First Lord of the Admiralty. Henry Fox took over as Leader of the Commons, and forced the peace treaty through parliament.

Bute's position grew increasingly untenable as he was extremely unpopular, which led to him offering his resignation to George III on several occasions. With reluctance George III eventually accepted Bute's resignation and accepted that Grenville should be his successor, in spite of his personal dislike of him. In April 1763, Grenville became First Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer succeeding Bute as first Minister after Henry Fox had rejected the job.

Prime minister

Grenville's first act was to prosecute John Wilkes for publishing in The North Briton newspaper an article deriding King George III's speech made on 23 April 1763.[1] Wilkes was prosecuted for "seditious libel" and, after a duel with a Grenville supporter Samuel Martin, fled to France. Wilkes was later elected and re-elected by the Middlesex constituency. He was continually refused admission to parliament by parliament, and proved a problem to several successive governments.

As Britain was trying to recover from the costs of the Seven Years' War and now in dire need of finances for the British army in the American colonies, Grenville's most immediate task was to restore the nation's finances. He also had to deal with the fall-out from Pontiac's Rebellion, which erupted in North America in 1763. Prominent measures of his administration included the prosecution of John Wilkes and the passing of the American Stamp Act 1765, which led to the first symptoms of alienation between American colonies and Great Britain.[3]

Stamp Act

 
Cartoon depicting the repeal of the Stamp Act as a funeral, with Grenville carrying a child's coffin marked "Miss America Stamp born 1765, died 1766" (The Skulls refer to the Scottish Rebellions of 1715 and 1745)
 
An English Newspaper on the repeal of the Stamp Act

One of the more prominent measures of Grenville's administration occurred in March 1765 when Grenville authored the Stamp Act, enacted in November of that year. It was an exclusive tax placed on the colonies in America requiring that documents and newspapers be printed on stamped paper from London bearing an embossed revenue stamp that had to be paid for in British currency. It was met with general outrage and resulted in public acts of disobedience and rioting throughout the colonies in America.[12]

Foreign policy

In disputes with Spain and France, Grenville managed to secure British objectives by deploying what was later described as gunboat diplomacy.[13] During his administration Britain's international isolation increased, as Britain failed to secure alliances with other major European powers, a situation that subsequent governments were unable to reverse leading to Britain fighting several countries during the American War of Independence without a major ally.

Dismissal

The King made various attempts to induce Pitt to come to his rescue by forming a ministry, but without success, and at last had recourse to Lord Rockingham. When Rockingham agreed to accept office, the king dismissed Grenville in July 1765. He never again held office.[14][3]

The nickname of "gentle shepherd" was given him because he bored the House by asking over and over again, during the debate on the Cider Bill of 1763, that somebody should tell him "where" to lay the new tax if it was not to be put on cider. Pitt whistled the air of the popular tune (by Boyce) Gentle Shepherd, tell me where, and the House laughed.[15] Though few surpassed him in knowledge of the forms of the House or in mastery of administrative details, he lacked tact in dealing with people and affairs.[3]

Later career

After a period of active opposition to the Chatham Ministry led by Pitt between 1766 and 1768, Grenville became an elder statesman during his last few years – seeking to avoid becoming associated with any faction or party in the House of Commons.[16] He was able to oversee the re-election of his core group of supporters in the 1768 General Election. His followers included Robert Clive and Lord George Sackville and he received support from his elder brother Lord Temple.

In late 1768 he reconciled with Pitt and the two joined forces, re-uniting the partnership that had broken up in 1761 when Pitt had resigned from the government.[17] Grenville was successful in mobilising the opposition during the Middlesex election dispute.

Grenville prosecuted John Wilkes and the printers and authors for treason and sedition for publishing a bitter editorial about King George III's recent speech in "The North Briton" a weekly periodical. After losing the case Grenville lost favor from the public who regarded the act as an attempt to silence or control the press.[14][18]

Although personally opposed to Wilkes, Grenville saw the government's attempt to bar him from the Commons as unconstitutional and opposed it on principle.

Following a French invasion of Corsica in 1768 Grenville advocated sending British support to the Corsican Republic. Grenville was critical of the Grafton Government's failure to intervene and he considered such weakness would encourage the French. In the House of Commons he observed "For fear of going to war, you will make a war unavoidable".[19]

In 1770 Grenville steered a bill concerning the results of contested elections, a major issue in the eighteenth century, into law – despite strong opposition from the government.[20]

Grenville died on 13 November 1770, aged 58. His personal following divided after his death, with a number joining the government of Lord North. In the long-term, the Grenvillites were revived by William Pitt the Younger who served as Prime Minister from 1784 and dominated British politics until his death in 1806. Grenville's own son, William Grenville, later served briefly as Prime Minister.[14] Grenville is buried at Wotton Underwood in Buckinghamshire[21]

George Grenville's post mortem was carried up by John Hunter who retained specimens in his collection which later became the Hunterian Museum. Subsequent analysis of these specimens published by the Royal College of Surgeons of England suggests that George Grenville was affected by Multiple myeloma at the time of his death.[22]


Legacy

He was one of the relatively few prime ministers (others include Henry Pelham, William Pitt the Younger, Henry Campbell-Bannerman, Bonar Law, Ramsay MacDonald, Neville Chamberlain, Sir Winston Churchill, George Canning, Spencer Perceval, William Ewart Gladstone, Edward Heath, John Major, Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, David Cameron, Theresa May, Boris Johnson, and Liz Truss) who never acceded to the peerage.

The town of Grenville, Quebec, was named after George Grenville. The town is in turn the namesake for the Grenville orogeny, a long-lived Mesoproterozoic mountain-building event associated with the assembly of the supercontinent Rodinia. Its record is a prominent orogenic belt which spans a significant portion of the North American continent, from Labrador to Mexico, and extends to Scotland.

Family life

In 1749 Grenville married Elizabeth Wyndham (1719 – 5 December 1769), daughter of Sir William Wyndham, and the granddaughter of the Duke of Somerset. Somerset did not approve of their marriage and consequently left Elizabeth only a small sum in his will.[14]

The couple had four sons and four daughters.[23] (One account states they had five daughters.)[14]

  1. Richard Grenville (died 1759), died young
  2. George Nugent-Temple-Grenville, 1st Marquess of Buckingham (17 June 1753 – 11 February 1813), father of the 1st Duke of Buckingham and Chandos
  3. Charlotte Grenville (c. 1754 – 29 September 1830), married Sir Watkin Williams-Wynn, 4th Baronet (1749–1789) on 21 December 1771, and had eight children, six of whom survived to adulthood
  4. Thomas Grenville (31 December 1755 – 17 December 1846), MP and bibliophile, died unmarried
  5. Elizabeth Grenville (24 October 1756 – 21 December 1842), married (as his second wife) John Proby, 1st Earl of Carysfort (1751–1828), on 12 April 1787, and had three daughters
  6. William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville (25 October 1759 – 12 January 1834), later Prime Minister
  7. Catherine Grenville (1761 – 6 November 1796), married Richard Neville-Aldworth (1750–1825), afterwards Richard Griffin, 2nd Baron Braybrooke, on 19 June 1780, and had four children.
  8. Hester Grenville (before 1767 – 13 November 1847), married Hugh Fortescue, 1st Earl Fortescue, on 10 May 1782 and had nine children

At the time of his death in 1770, he was the heir presumptive to the Earldom of Temple held by his elder brother Richard (who had succeeded their mother in that title in 1752, but had no sons). When Richard died in 1779, George's second (but eldest surviving) son, also George, therefore succeeded as 3rd Earl Temple, and was later created Marquess of Buckingham. His male line survived until the death of the 3rd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos in 1889.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b . A History of England, by Charles M. Andrews, Professor of History in Bryn Mawr College History. Library 4 History. Archived from the original on 26 September 2010. Retrieved 28 October 2010.
  2. ^ Lawson, p. 3.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Chisholm 1911, p. 580.
  4. ^ Lawson.
  5. ^ Lawson, pp. 84–87.
  6. ^ Brown, p. 133.
  7. ^ Lawson, pp. 110–113.
  8. ^ Lawson, pp. 107–108.
  9. ^ Lawson, pp. 108–109.
  10. ^ Anderson, pp. 487–488.
  11. ^ George Grenville, Smith Rebellion 1765, Retrieved: 28 October 2010
    Sources:
    *History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent Volume V. Bancroft, George. Little, Brown and Company. Boston, Mass. 1854
    *American Leviathan: Empire, Nation and the Revolutionary Frontier. Griffin, Patrick. Hill and Wang A division of Farrar, Straus and Giroux. New York, NY. 2007
    * Wilkes, Liberty, and Number 45: The Colonial Williamsburg Official History Site. http://www.history.org/Foundation/journal/summer03/wilkes.cfm
  12. ^ Marjie Bloy Ph.D., Senior Research Fellow
    National University of Singapore
  13. ^ Thomas, p. 114.
  14. ^ a b c d e "George Grenville (1712–1770)". Dr. Bloy, A Web of English History. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
    Bibliography of source material:
    * Lawson, P. George Grenville: A Political Life. Oxford 1984.
    * Wiggin, L. M. The Faction of Cousins: a Political Account of the Grenvilles 1733–1763. New Haven, 1958.
  15. ^ Lawson, p. 149.
  16. ^ Johnson, p. 297.
  17. ^ Lawson, p. 273.
  18. ^ . Britannia.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2010. Retrieved 27 October 2010.
  19. ^ Thomas, p. 199.
  20. ^ Lawson, pp. 285–286.
  21. ^ GrenODNB.
  22. ^ Spigelman, M.; Berger, L.; Pinhasi, R.; Donoghue, HD; Chaplin, S. (2008). "John Hunter's Post-Mortem Examination Of George Grenville (1712–1770)". The Bulletin of the Royal College of Surgeons of England. 90 (10): 338–339. doi:10.1308/147363508X337163.
  23. ^ See pedigrees in Beckett 1994, p. 35; and in Sack, James J. (1979). The Grenvillites, 1801–29: Party Politics and Factionalism in the age of Pitt and Liverpool. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. pp. xxii–xxiii. ISBN 978-0252007132.

Attribution

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Grenville, George". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 580–581.

Bibliography

  • Anderson, Fred (2000). Crucible of War: the Seven Years' War and the Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754–1766. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0571205356.
  • Barker, George Fisher Russell (1890). "Grenville, George (1712-1770)" . In Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney (eds.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 23. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Beckett, J. V. (1994). The Rise and Fall of the Grenvilles: Dukes of Buckingham and Chandos, 1710 to 1921. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0719037566.
  • Beckett, J. V. "Grenville, George". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11489. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.); cited as GrenODNB.
  • Black, Jeremy (1992). Pitt the Elder. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521391160.
  • Brown, Peter Douglas (1978). William Pitt, Earl of Chatham: the Great Commoner. London: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-0049421455.
  • Johnson, Allen S. (1997). A Prologue to Revolution: the Political Career of George Grenville (1712–1770). Lanham, Md.: University Press of America. ISBN 978-0761806004.
  • Lawson, Philip (1984). George Grenville: a Political Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0198227557.
  • Leonard, Dick. "George Grenville — Able Premier, Undermined by His Own Prolixity" in Dick Leonard, ed. Eighteenth-Century British Premiers (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2011) pp 92–110
  • Smith, W. J., ed. (1852–53). The Grenville Papers, being the Correspondence of Richard Grenville, Earl Temple, K.G., and the Right Hon. George Grenville, their Friends and Contemporaries. London.
  • Thomas, Peter David Garner (2002). George III: King and Politicians, 1760–1770. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0719064289.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by Treasurer of the Navy
1756
Succeeded by
Preceded by Treasurer of the Navy
1756–1762
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the House of Commons
1761–1762
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of State for the Northern Department
1762
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Lord of the Admiralty
1762–1763
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Great Britain
16 April 1763 – 10 July 1765
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1763–1765
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the House of Commons
1763–1765
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Buckingham
1741–1770
With: George Chamberlayne 1741–1747
Richard Grenville 1747–1753
Temple West 1753–1754
James Grenville 1754–1768
Henry Grenville
Succeeded by

george, grenville, other, people, named, disambiguation, october, 1712, november, 1770, british, whig, statesman, rose, position, prime, minister, great, britain, grenville, born, into, influential, political, family, first, entered, parliament, 1741, buckingh. For other people named George Grenville see George Grenville disambiguation George Grenville 14 October 1712 13 November 1770 was a British Whig statesman who rose to the position of Prime Minister of Great Britain Grenville was born into an influential political family and first entered Parliament in 1741 as an MP for Buckingham He emerged as one of Cobham s Cubs a group of young members of Parliament associated with Lord Cobham The Right HonourableGeorge GrenvillePortrait by William Hoare 1764Prime Minister of Great BritainIn office 16 April 1763 10 July 1765MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded byThe Earl of ButeSucceeded byThe Marquess of RockinghamChancellor of the ExchequerIn office 16 April 1763 16 July 1765MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded bySir Francis Dashwood BtSucceeded byWilliam DowdeswellNorthern SecretaryIn office 27 May 1762 9 October 1762Prime MinisterThe Earl of ButePreceded byThe Earl of ButeSucceeded byThe Earl of HalifaxMember of Parliamentfor BuckinghamIn office 11 June 1741 13 November 1770Preceded byRichard GrenvilleSucceeded byJames GrenvillePersonal detailsBorn 1712 10 14 14 October 1712Wotton Underwood EnglandDied13 November 1770 1770 11 13 aged 58 Mayfair EnglandResting placeAll Saints Churchyard Wotton UnderwoodPolitical partyWhig Grenvillite SpouseElizabeth Wyndham m 1749 died 1769 wbr Children8 including George Charlotte Thomas and WilliamParentsRichard Grenville father Hester Temple mother Alma materChrist Church OxfordEton CollegeIn 1754 Grenville became Treasurer of the Navy a position he held twice until 1761 In October 1761 he chose to stay in government and accepted the new role of Leader of the Commons causing a rift with his brother in law and political ally William Pitt who had resigned Grenville was subsequently made Northern Secretary and First Lord of the Admiralty by the new Prime Minister Lord Bute On 8 April 1763 Lord Bute resigned and Grenville assumed his position as Prime Minister 1 His government tried to bring public spending under control and pursued an assertive foreign policy His best known policy is the Stamp Act a long standing tax in Great Britain which Grenville extended to the colonies in America but which instigated widespread opposition in Britain s American colonies and was later repealed Grenville had increasingly strained relations with his colleagues and the King In 1765 he was dismissed by George III and replaced by Lord Rockingham For the last five years of his life Grenville led a group of his supporters in opposition and staged a public reconciliation with Pitt Coat of arms of Grenville of Wotton Underwood Buckinghamshire Vert on a cross argent five torteaux Contents 1 Early life 2 Politics 2 1 Loyalist 2 2 Joins Administration 3 In Government with Pitt 3 1 Treasurer of the Navy 3 2 Northern Secretary 4 Prime minister 4 1 Stamp Act 4 2 Foreign policy 4 3 Dismissal 5 Later career 6 Legacy 7 Family life 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEarly life EditGeorge Grenville was born at Wotton House on 14 October 1712 He was the second son of Richard Grenville and Hester Temple later the 1st Countess Temple He was one of five brothers all of whom became MPs His sister Hester Grenville married the leading political figure William Pitt His elder brother was Richard Grenville later the 2nd Earl Temple It was intended by his parents that George Grenville should become a lawyer 2 Grenville was educated at Eton College and at Christ Church Oxford and was called to the bar in 1735 3 Politics EditLoyalist Edit Main article Cobhamites Stowe House Buckinghamshire the political base of the Cobham faction In 1749 ownership of the estate passed to Grenville s brother Richard He entered Parliament in 1741 as one of the two members for Buckingham and continued to represent that borough for the next twenty nine years until his death 3 He was disappointed to be giving up what appeared to be a promising legal career for the uncertainties of opposition politics 4 In Parliament he subscribed to the Boy Patriot party which opposed Sir Robert Walpole 3 In particular he enjoyed the patronage of Lord Cobham the leader of a faction that included George Grenville his brother Richard William Pitt and George Lyttelton that became known as Cobham s Cubs Joins Administration Edit In December 1744 he became a Lord of the Admiralty in the administration of Henry Pelham He allied himself with his brother Richard and with William Pitt who became their brother in law in 1754 in forcing Pelham to give them promotion by rebelling against his authority and obstructing business In June 1747 Grenville became a Lord of the Treasury 3 In 1754 Grenville was made Treasurer of the Navy and Privy Councillor Along with Pitt and several other colleagues he was dismissed in 1755 after speaking and voting against the government on a debate about a recent subsidy treaty with Russia which they believed was unnecessarily costly and would drag Britain into Continental European disputes Opposition to European entanglements was a cornerstone of Patriot Whig thinking He and Pitt joined the opposition haranguing the Newcastle government Grenville and Pitt both championed the formation of a British militia to provide additional security rather than the deployment of Hessian mercenaries favoured by the government 5 As the military situation deteriorated following the loss of Minorca the government grew increasingly weak until it was forced to resign in Autumn 1756 In Government with Pitt EditFurther information Great Britain in the Seven Years War Treasurer of the Navy Edit Pitt then formed a government led by the Duke of Devonshire Grenville was returned to his position as Treasurer of the Navy which was a great disappointment as he had been expecting to receive the more prestigious and lucrative post of Paymaster of the Forces 6 This added to what Grenville regarded as a series of earlier slights in which Pitt and others had passed him over for positions in favour of men he considered no more talented than he was From then on Grenville felt a growing resentment towards Pitt and grew closer to the young Prince of Wales and his advisor Lord Bute who were both now opposed to Pitt 7 In 1758 as Treasurer of the Navy he introduced and carried a bill which established a fairer system of paying the wages of seamen and supporting their families while they were at sea which was praised for its humanity if not for its effectiveness 8 He remained in office during the years of British victories notably the Annus Mirabilis of 1759 for which the credit went to the government of which he was a member However his seven year old son died after a long illness and Grenville remained by his side at their country house in Wotton and rarely came to London 9 In 1761 when Pitt resigned upon the question of the war with Spain and subsequently functioned as Leader of the House of Commons in the administration of Lord Bute 3 Grenville s role was seen as an attempt to keep someone closely associated with Pitt involved in the government in order to prevent Pitt and his supporters actively opposing the government However it soon led to conflict between Grenville and Pitt Grenville was also seen as a suitable candidate because his reputation for honesty meant he commanded loyalty and respect amongst independent MPs 10 Northern Secretary Edit Lord Bute Prime Minister between 1762 and 1763 under whom Grenville served and whom he later succeeded In May 1762 Grenville was appointed Northern Secretary where he took an increasingly hard line in the negotiations with France and Spain designed to bring the Seven Years War to a close 11 Grenville demanded much greater compensation in exchange for the return of British conquests while Bute favored a more generous position which eventually formed the basis of the Treaty of Paris In spite of this Grenville had now become associated with Bute rather than his former political allies who were even more vocal in their opposition to the peace treaty than he was In October he was made First Lord of the Admiralty Henry Fox took over as Leader of the Commons and forced the peace treaty through parliament Bute s position grew increasingly untenable as he was extremely unpopular which led to him offering his resignation to George III on several occasions With reluctance George III eventually accepted Bute s resignation and accepted that Grenville should be his successor in spite of his personal dislike of him In April 1763 Grenville became First Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer succeeding Bute as first Minister after Henry Fox had rejected the job Prime minister EditFurther information Grenville ministry Grenville s first act was to prosecute John Wilkes for publishing in The North Briton newspaper an article deriding King George III s speech made on 23 April 1763 1 Wilkes was prosecuted for seditious libel and after a duel with a Grenville supporter Samuel Martin fled to France Wilkes was later elected and re elected by the Middlesex constituency He was continually refused admission to parliament by parliament and proved a problem to several successive governments As Britain was trying to recover from the costs of the Seven Years War and now in dire need of finances for the British army in the American colonies Grenville s most immediate task was to restore the nation s finances He also had to deal with the fall out from Pontiac s Rebellion which erupted in North America in 1763 Prominent measures of his administration included the prosecution of John Wilkes and the passing of the American Stamp Act 1765 which led to the first symptoms of alienation between American colonies and Great Britain 3 Stamp Act Edit Cartoon depicting the repeal of the Stamp Act as a funeral with Grenville carrying a child s coffin marked Miss America Stamp born 1765 died 1766 The Skulls refer to the Scottish Rebellions of 1715 and 1745 An English Newspaper on the repeal of the Stamp Act Main article Stamp Act 1765 One of the more prominent measures of Grenville s administration occurred in March 1765 when Grenville authored the Stamp Act enacted in November of that year It was an exclusive tax placed on the colonies in America requiring that documents and newspapers be printed on stamped paper from London bearing an embossed revenue stamp that had to be paid for in British currency It was met with general outrage and resulted in public acts of disobedience and rioting throughout the colonies in America 12 Foreign policy Edit In disputes with Spain and France Grenville managed to secure British objectives by deploying what was later described as gunboat diplomacy 13 During his administration Britain s international isolation increased as Britain failed to secure alliances with other major European powers a situation that subsequent governments were unable to reverse leading to Britain fighting several countries during the American War of Independence without a major ally Dismissal Edit The King made various attempts to induce Pitt to come to his rescue by forming a ministry but without success and at last had recourse to Lord Rockingham When Rockingham agreed to accept office the king dismissed Grenville in July 1765 He never again held office 14 3 The nickname of gentle shepherd was given him because he bored the House by asking over and over again during the debate on the Cider Bill of 1763 that somebody should tell him where to lay the new tax if it was not to be put on cider Pitt whistled the air of the popular tune by Boyce Gentle Shepherd tell me where and the House laughed 15 Though few surpassed him in knowledge of the forms of the House or in mastery of administrative details he lacked tact in dealing with people and affairs 3 Later career EditAfter a period of active opposition to the Chatham Ministry led by Pitt between 1766 and 1768 Grenville became an elder statesman during his last few years seeking to avoid becoming associated with any faction or party in the House of Commons 16 He was able to oversee the re election of his core group of supporters in the 1768 General Election His followers included Robert Clive and Lord George Sackville and he received support from his elder brother Lord Temple In late 1768 he reconciled with Pitt and the two joined forces re uniting the partnership that had broken up in 1761 when Pitt had resigned from the government 17 Grenville was successful in mobilising the opposition during the Middlesex election dispute Grenville prosecuted John Wilkes and the printers and authors for treason and sedition for publishing a bitter editorial about King George III s recent speech in The North Briton a weekly periodical After losing the case Grenville lost favor from the public who regarded the act as an attempt to silence or control the press 14 18 Although personally opposed to Wilkes Grenville saw the government s attempt to bar him from the Commons as unconstitutional and opposed it on principle Following a French invasion of Corsica in 1768 Grenville advocated sending British support to the Corsican Republic Grenville was critical of the Grafton Government s failure to intervene and he considered such weakness would encourage the French In the House of Commons he observed For fear of going to war you will make a war unavoidable 19 In 1770 Grenville steered a bill concerning the results of contested elections a major issue in the eighteenth century into law despite strong opposition from the government 20 Grenville died on 13 November 1770 aged 58 His personal following divided after his death with a number joining the government of Lord North In the long term the Grenvillites were revived by William Pitt the Younger who served as Prime Minister from 1784 and dominated British politics until his death in 1806 Grenville s own son William Grenville later served briefly as Prime Minister 14 Grenville is buried at Wotton Underwood in Buckinghamshire 21 George Grenville s post mortem was carried up by John Hunter who retained specimens in his collection which later became the Hunterian Museum Subsequent analysis of these specimens published by the Royal College of Surgeons of England suggests that George Grenville was affected by Multiple myeloma at the time of his death 22 Legacy EditHe was one of the relatively few prime ministers others include Henry Pelham William Pitt the Younger Henry Campbell Bannerman Bonar Law Ramsay MacDonald Neville Chamberlain Sir Winston Churchill George Canning Spencer Perceval William Ewart Gladstone Edward Heath John Major Tony Blair Gordon Brown David Cameron Theresa May Boris Johnson and Liz Truss who never acceded to the peerage The town of Grenville Quebec was named after George Grenville The town is in turn the namesake for the Grenville orogeny a long lived Mesoproterozoic mountain building event associated with the assembly of the supercontinent Rodinia Its record is a prominent orogenic belt which spans a significant portion of the North American continent from Labrador to Mexico and extends to Scotland Family life EditIn 1749 Grenville married Elizabeth Wyndham 1719 5 December 1769 daughter of Sir William Wyndham and the granddaughter of the Duke of Somerset Somerset did not approve of their marriage and consequently left Elizabeth only a small sum in his will 14 The couple had four sons and four daughters 23 One account states they had five daughters 14 Richard Grenville died 1759 died young George Nugent Temple Grenville 1st Marquess of Buckingham 17 June 1753 11 February 1813 father of the 1st Duke of Buckingham and Chandos Charlotte Grenville c 1754 29 September 1830 married Sir Watkin Williams Wynn 4th Baronet 1749 1789 on 21 December 1771 and had eight children six of whom survived to adulthood Thomas Grenville 31 December 1755 17 December 1846 MP and bibliophile died unmarried Elizabeth Grenville 24 October 1756 21 December 1842 married as his second wife John Proby 1st Earl of Carysfort 1751 1828 on 12 April 1787 and had three daughters William Grenville 1st Baron Grenville 25 October 1759 12 January 1834 later Prime Minister Catherine Grenville 1761 6 November 1796 married Richard Neville Aldworth 1750 1825 afterwards Richard Griffin 2nd Baron Braybrooke on 19 June 1780 and had four children Hester Grenville before 1767 13 November 1847 married Hugh Fortescue 1st Earl Fortescue on 10 May 1782 and had nine childrenAt the time of his death in 1770 he was the heir presumptive to the Earldom of Temple held by his elder brother Richard who had succeeded their mother in that title in 1752 but had no sons When Richard died in 1779 George s second but eldest surviving son also George therefore succeeded as 3rd Earl Temple and was later created Marquess of Buckingham His male line survived until the death of the 3rd Duke of Buckingham and Chandos in 1889 See also EditGrenvilliteReferences Edit a b Public Opinion and the House of Commons John Wilkes A History of England by Charles M Andrews Professor of History in Bryn Mawr College History Library 4 History Archived from the original on 26 September 2010 Retrieved 28 October 2010 Lawson p 3 a b c d e f g h Chisholm 1911 p 580 Lawson Lawson pp 84 87 Brown p 133 Lawson pp 110 113 Lawson pp 107 108 Lawson pp 108 109 Anderson pp 487 488 George Grenville Smith Rebellion 1765 Retrieved 28 October 2010Sources History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent Volume V Bancroft George Little Brown and Company Boston Mass 1854 American Leviathan Empire Nation and the Revolutionary Frontier Griffin Patrick Hill and Wang A division of Farrar Straus and Giroux New York NY 2007 Wilkes Liberty and Number 45 The Colonial Williamsburg Official History Site http www history org Foundation journal summer03 wilkes cfm Marjie Bloy Ph D Senior Research FellowNational University of Singapore Thomas p 114 a b c d e George Grenville 1712 1770 Dr Bloy A Web of English History Retrieved 25 October 2010 Bibliography of source material Lawson P George Grenville A Political Life Oxford 1984 Wiggin L M The Faction of Cousins a Political Account of the Grenvilles 1733 1763 New Haven 1958 Lawson p 149 Johnson p 297 Lawson p 273 George Grenville 1712 1770 Britannia com Archived from the original on 24 September 2010 Retrieved 27 October 2010 Thomas p 199 Lawson pp 285 286 GrenODNB Spigelman M Berger L Pinhasi R Donoghue HD Chaplin S 2008 John Hunter s Post Mortem Examination Of George Grenville 1712 1770 The Bulletin of the Royal College of Surgeons of England 90 10 338 339 doi 10 1308 147363508X337163 See pedigrees in Beckett 1994 p 35 and in Sack James J 1979 The Grenvillites 1801 29 Party Politics and Factionalism in the age of Pitt and Liverpool Urbana University of Illinois Press pp xxii xxiii ISBN 978 0252007132 Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Grenville George Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 580 581 Bibliography EditAnderson Fred 2000 Crucible of War the Seven Years War and the Fate of Empire in British North America 1754 1766 London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0571205356 Barker George Fisher Russell 1890 Grenville George 1712 1770 In Stephen Leslie Lee Sidney eds Dictionary of National Biography Vol 23 London Smith Elder amp Co Beckett J V 1994 The Rise and Fall of the Grenvilles Dukes of Buckingham and Chandos 1710 to 1921 Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0719037566 Beckett J V Grenville George Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 11489 Subscription or UK public library membership required cited as GrenODNB Black Jeremy 1992 Pitt the Elder Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521391160 Brown Peter Douglas 1978 William Pitt Earl of Chatham the Great Commoner London Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 0049421455 Johnson Allen S 1997 A Prologue to Revolution the Political Career of George Grenville 1712 1770 Lanham Md University Press of America ISBN 978 0761806004 Lawson Philip 1984 George Grenville a Political Life Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0198227557 Leonard Dick George Grenville Able Premier Undermined by His Own Prolixity in Dick Leonard ed Eighteenth Century British Premiers Palgrave Macmillan UK 2011 pp 92 110 Smith W J ed 1852 53 The Grenville Papers being the Correspondence of Richard Grenville Earl Temple K G and the Right Hon George Grenville their Friends and Contemporaries London Thomas Peter David Garner 2002 George III King and Politicians 1760 1770 Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0719064289 External links EditPolitical officesPreceded byHenry Legge Treasurer of the Navy1756 Succeeded byGeorge DodingtonPreceded byGeorge Dodington Treasurer of the Navy1756 1762 Succeeded byThe Viscount BarringtonPreceded byWilliam Pitt the Elder Leader of the House of Commons1761 1762 Succeeded byHenry FoxPreceded byThe Earl of Bute Secretary of State for the Northern Department1762 Succeeded byThe Earl of HalifaxPreceded byThe Earl of Halifax First Lord of the Admiralty1762 1763 Succeeded byThe Earl of SandwichPreceded byThe Earl of Bute Prime Minister of Great Britain16 April 1763 10 July 1765 Succeeded byThe Marquess of RockinghamPreceded bySir Francis Dashwood 2nd Bt Chancellor of the Exchequer1763 1765 Succeeded byWilliam DowdeswellPreceded byHenry Fox Leader of the House of Commons1763 1765 Succeeded byHenry Seymour ConwayParliament of Great BritainPreceded byGeorge ChamberlayneRichard Grenville Member of Parliament for Buckingham1741 1770 With George Chamberlayne 1741 1747Richard Grenville 1747 1753Temple West 1753 1754James Grenville 1754 1768Henry Grenville Succeeded byHenry GrenvilleJames Grenville Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Grenville amp oldid 1150291817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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