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Robert Peel

Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, FRS (5 February 1788 – 2 July 1850) was a British Conservative statesman who served twice as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1834–1835 and 1841–1846) simultaneously serving as Chancellor of the Exchequer (1834–1835) and twice as Home Secretary (1822–1827 and 1828–1830). He is regarded as the father of modern British policing, owing to his founding of the Metropolitan Police Service. Peel was one of the founders of the modern Conservative Party.

Robert Peel
Detail of a portrait painting
by Henry William Pickersgill
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office
30 August 1841 – 29 June 1846
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byThe Viscount Melbourne
Succeeded byLord John Russell
In office
10 December 1834 – 8 April 1835
MonarchWilliam IV
Preceded byThe Duke of Wellington
Succeeded byThe Viscount Melbourne
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
15 December 1834 – 8 April 1835
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byThe Lord Denman
Succeeded byThomas Spring Rice
Home Secretary
In office
26 January 1828 – 22 November 1830
Prime MinisterThe Duke of Wellington
Preceded byThe Marquess of Lansdowne
Succeeded byThe Viscount Melbourne
In office
17 January 1822 – 10 April 1827
Prime MinisterThe Earl of Liverpool
Preceded byThe Viscount Sidmouth
Succeeded byWilliam Sturges Bourne
Chief Secretary for Ireland
In office
August 1812 – August 1818
Prime MinisterThe Earl of Liverpool
Preceded byThe Earl of Mornington
Succeeded byCharles Grant
Personal details
Born(1788-02-05)5 February 1788
Bury, Lancashire, England
Died2 July 1850(1850-07-02) (aged 62)
Westminster, Middlesex, England
Resting placeSt Peter Churchyard, Drayton Bassett
Political partyTory (1809–1834)
Conservative (1834–1846)
Peelite (1846–1850)
Spouse
(m. 1820)
Children
Parent(s)Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet
Ellen Yates
EducationHarrow School
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford (BA)
Lincoln's Inn
Signature
Military service
Years of service1820
RankLieutenant
UnitStaffordshire Yeomanry

The son of a wealthy textile manufacturer and politician, Peel was the first prime minister from an industrial business background. He earned a double first in classics and mathematics from Christ Church, Oxford. He entered the House of Commons in 1809, and became a rising star in the Tory Party. Peel entered the Cabinet as Home Secretary (1822–1827), where he reformed and liberalised the criminal law and created the modern police force, leading to a new type of officer known in tribute to him as "bobbies" and "peelers". After a brief period out of office he returned as Home Secretary under his political mentor the Duke of Wellington (1828–1830), also serving as Leader of the House of Commons. Initially, a supporter of continued legal discrimination against Catholics, Peel reversed himself and supported the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 and the 1828 repeal of the Test Act, claiming that "though emancipation was a great danger, civil strife was a greater danger".[1]

After being in Opposition from 1830 to 1834, he became Prime Minister in November 1834. Peel issued the Tamworth Manifesto (December 1834), laying down the principles upon which the modern British Conservative Party is based. His first ministry was a minority government, dependent on Whig support and with Peel serving as his own Chancellor of the Exchequer. After only four months, his government collapsed and he served as Leader of the Opposition during Melbourne's second government (1835–1841). Peel became Prime Minister again after the 1841 general election. His second government ruled for five years. He cut tariffs to stimulate trade, replacing the lost revenue with a 3% income tax. He played a central role in making free trade a reality and set up a modern banking system. His government's major legislation included the Mines and Collieries Act 1842, the Income Tax Act 1842, the Factories Act 1844 and the Railway Regulation Act 1844. Peel's government was weakened by anti-Catholic sentiment following the controversial increase in the Maynooth Grant of 1845. After the outbreak of the Great Irish Famine, his decision to join with Whigs and Radicals to repeal the Corn Laws led to his resignation as Prime Minister in 1846. Peel remained an influential MP and leader of the Peelite faction until his death in 1850.

Peel often started from a traditional Tory position in opposition to a measure, then reversed his stance and became the leader in supporting liberal legislation. This happened with the Test Act, Catholic Emancipation, the Reform Act, income tax and, most notably, the repeal of the Corn Laws. Historian A. J. P. Taylor wrote: "Peel was in the first rank of 19th-century statesmen. He carried Catholic Emancipation; he repealed the Corn Laws; he created the modern Conservative Party on the ruins of the old Toryism."[2]

Early life

Peel was born at Chamber Hall, Bury, Lancashire, to the industrialist and parliamentarian Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet, and his wife Ellen Yates. His father was one of the richest textile manufacturers of the early Industrial Revolution.[3] The family moved from Lancashire to Drayton Manor near Tamworth, Staffordshire; the manor house has since been demolished, and the site occupied by Drayton Manor Theme Park.[4]

Peel received his early education from a clergyman tutor in Bury and at a clergyman's local school in Tamworth.[1] He may also have attended Bury Grammar School or Hipperholme Grammar School, though evidence for either is anecdotal rather than textual.[5] He started at Harrow School in February 1800.[6] At Harrow he was a contemporary of Lord Byron, who recalled of Peel that "we were on good terms" and that "I was always in scrapes, and he never".[7] On Harrow's Speech Day in 1804, Peel and Byron acted part of Virgil's Aeneid, Peel playing Turnus and Byron playing Latinus.[1][8]

 
Christ Church, Oxford, which Peel attended 1805–1808, graduating with a double first. He was later MP for the university, 1817–1829.

In 1805 Peel matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford.[9] His tutor was Charles Lloyd, later Regius Professor of Divinity,[10] on Peel's recommendation appointed Bishop of Oxford.[11] In 1808 Peel became the first Oxford student to take a double first in Classics and Mathematics.[12]

Peel was a law student at Lincoln's Inn in 1809.[13] He also held military commissions as a captain in the Manchester Regiment of Militia in 1808,[14] and later as lieutenant in the Staffordshire Yeomanry Cavalry in 1820.[15]

Early political career

Member of Parliament

Peel entered politics in 1809 at the age of 21, as MP for the Irish rotten borough of Cashel, Tipperary.[16] With a scant 24 electors on the rolls, he was elected unopposed. His sponsor for the election (besides his father) was the Chief Secretary for Ireland, Sir Arthur Wellesley, the future Duke of Wellington, with whom Peel's political career would be entwined for the next 25 years. Peel made his maiden speech at the start of the 1810 session, when he was chosen by Prime Minister Spencer Perceval to second the reply to the king's speech.[17] His speech was a sensation, famously described by the Speaker, Charles Abbot, as "the best first speech since that of William Pitt".[18]

Peel changed constituency twice, becoming one of the two Members for Chippenham in 1812, and then one of those for Oxford University in 1817.[19]

In 1810, Peel was appointed an Under-Secretary of State for War and the Colonies; his Secretary of State was Lord Liverpool.[1] When Lord Liverpool formed a government in 1812, Peel was appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland.[1] The Peace Preservation Act of 1814 authorised the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to appoint additional magistrates in a county in a state of disturbance, who were authorised to appoint paid special constables (later called "peelers"[20]). Peel thus laid the basis for the Royal Irish Constabulary.[21]

Peel was firmly opposed to Catholic emancipation, believing that Catholics could not be admitted to Parliament as they refused to swear the Oath of Allegiance to the Crown.[22] In May 1817, Peel delivered the closing speech in opposition to Henry Grattan's Catholic emancipation bill; the bill was defeated by 245 votes to 221.[23]

Peel resigned as Chief Secretary and left Ireland in August 1818.[1]

In 1819 the House of Commons appointed a Select Committee, the Bullion Committee, charged with stabilising British finances after the end of the Napoleonic Wars, and Peel was chosen as its chairman.[24] Peel's Bill planned to return British currency to the gold standard, reversing the Bank Restriction Act 1797, within four years (it was actually accomplished by 1821).[25]

In Cabinet

Home Secretary

 
The Duke of Wellington, Prime Minister 1828–1830, with Peel

Peel was considered one of the rising stars of the Tory party, first entering the cabinet in 1822 as Home Secretary.[26] As Home Secretary, he introduced a number of important reforms to British criminal law.[27] He reduced the number of crimes punishable by death, and simplified the law by repealing a large number of criminal statutes and consolidating their provisions into what are known as Peel's Acts. He reformed the gaol system, introducing payment for gaolers and education for the inmates in the Gaols Act 1823.[28]

In 1827 the Prime Minister Lord Liverpool became incapacitated and was replaced by George Canning. Peel resigned as home secretary.[29] Canning favoured Catholic emancipation, while Peel had been one of its most outspoken opponents (earning the nickname "Orange Peel", with Orange the colour of the anti-Catholic Orange Order).[30] George Canning himself died less than four months later and, after the brief premiership of Lord Goderich, Peel returned to the post of Home Secretary under the premiership of his long-time ally the Duke of Wellington.[31] During this time he was widely perceived as the number-two in the Tory Party, after Wellington himself.[32]

The Test and Corporation Acts required many officials to be communicants in the Anglican Church and penalised both nonconformists and Catholics. They were no longer enforced but were a matter of humiliation. Peel at first opposed the repeal, but reversed himself and led the repeal on behalf of the government, after consultation with Anglican Church leaders.[33] The Sacramental Test Act 1828 passed into law in May 1828. In future religious issues he made it a point to consult with church leaders from the major denominations.[34]

The 1828 Clare by-election returned the Catholic Irish nationalist leader Daniel O'Connell. By autumn 1828, the Chief Secretary for Ireland was alarmed by the extent of civil disorder and the prospect of a rebellion[35] if O'Connell were barred from Parliament. Wellington and Peel now conceded the necessity of Catholic emancipation, Peel writing to Wellington that "though emancipation was a great danger, civil strife was a greater danger".[1] Peel drew up the Catholic Relief bill.

Peel felt compelled to stand for re-election to his seat in Oxford, as he was representing the graduates of Oxford University (many of whom were Anglican clergymen), and had previously stood on a platform of opposition to Catholic Emancipation.[36] Peel lost his seat in a by-election in February 1829, but soon found another, moving to a rotten borough, Westbury, retaining his Cabinet position.[37] He stood for Tamworth in the general election of 1830, representing Tamworth until his death.

Peel guided the Catholic relief bill through the House of Commons, Wellington through the House of Lords. With many Ultra-Tories vehemently opposed to emancipation, the bill could pass only with Whig support.[38] Wellington threatened to resign if King George IV did not give Royal assent;[39] the King finally relented, the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 passing into law in April 1829. Peel's U-turn cost him the trust of many Tories:[40] according to Norman Gash, Peel had been "the idolized champion of the Protestant party; that party now regarded him as an outcast".[41][42]

 
This satirical 1829 cartoon by William Heath depicted the Duke of Wellington and Peel in the roles of the body-snatchers Burke and Hare suffocating Mrs Docherty for sale to Dr. Knox; representing the extinguishing by Wellington and Peel of the 141-year-old Constitution of 1688 by Catholic Emancipation.

It was in 1829 that Peel established the Metropolitan Police Force for London based at Scotland Yard.[43] The 1,000 constables employed were affectionately nicknamed 'bobbies' or, somewhat less affectionately, 'peelers'. Although unpopular at first, they proved very successful in cutting crime in London,[44] and by 1857 all cities in Britain were obliged to form their own police forces.[45] Known as the father of modern policing, Peel is thought to have contributed to the Metropolitan Police's first set of "Instructions to Police Officers", emphasising the importance of its civilian nature and policing by consent. However, what are now commonly known as the Peelian Principles were not written by him but were instead produced by Charles Reith in his 1948 book A Short History of the British Police as a nine-point summary of the 1829 "Instructions".[46]

Tory Opposition

The middle and working classes in England at that time, however, were clamouring for reform, and Catholic Emancipation was only one of the ideas in the air.[47] The Tory ministry refused to bend on other issues and were swept out of office in 1830 in favour of the Whigs.[48] The following few years were extremely turbulent, but eventually enough reforms were passed that King William IV felt confident enough to invite the Tories to form a ministry again in succession to those of Lord Grey and Lord Melbourne in December 1834.[49] Peel was selected as prime minister but was in Italy at the time, so Wellington acted as a caretaker for three weeks until Peel's return.[50]

First term as Prime Minister (1834–1835)

The Tory Ministry was a minority government and depended on Whig goodwill for its continued existence. Parliament was dissolved in December 1834 and a general election was called. Voting took place in January and February 1835, and Peel's supporters gained around 100 seats, but this was not enough to give them a majority.[51]

As his statement of policy at the general election of January 1835, Peel issued the Tamworth Manifesto.[52] This document was the basis on which the modern Conservative Party was founded. In it, Peel pledged that the Conservatives would endorse modest reform.[53]

The Whigs formed a compact with Daniel O'Connell's Irish Radical members to repeatedly defeat the government on various bills.[54] Eventually, after only about 100 days in government, Peel's ministry resigned out of frustration and the Whigs under Lord Melbourne returned to power.[55] The only real achievement of Peel's first administration was a commission to review the governance of the Church of England. This ecclesiastical commission was the forerunner of the Church Commissioners.[56]

Leader of the Opposition (1835–1841)

In May 1839 he was offered another chance to form a government, this time by the new monarch, Queen Victoria.[57] However, this too would have been a minority government, and Peel felt he needed a further sign of confidence from his Queen. Lord Melbourne had been Victoria's confidant since her accession in 1837, and many of the higher posts in Victoria's household were held by the wives and female relatives of Whigs;[58] there was some feeling that Victoria had allowed herself to be too closely associated with the Whig party. Peel, therefore, asked that some of this entourage be dismissed and replaced with their Conservative counterparts, provoking the so-called Bedchamber Crisis.[59] Victoria refused to change her household, and despite pleadings from the Duke of Wellington, relied on assurances of support from Whig leaders. Peel refused to form a government, and the Whigs returned to power.[60]

Second term as Prime Minister (1841–1846)

 
Engraving showing the members of Sir Robert Peel's government in 1844

Economic and financial reforms

Peel finally had a chance to head a majority government following the election of July 1841.[61] Peel came to office during an economic recession which had seen a slump in world trade and a budget deficit of £7.5 million run up by the Whigs. Confidence in banks and businesses was low, and a trade deficit existed.

To raise revenue Peel's 1842 budget saw the re-introduction of the income tax,[62] removed previously at the end of the Napoleonic Wars. The rate was 7d in the pound, or just under 3 per cent. The money raised was more than expected and allowed for the removal and reduction of over 1,200 tariffs on imports including the controversial sugar duties.[63] It was also in the 1842 budget that the repeal of the corn laws was first proposed.[64] It was defeated in a Commons vote by a margin of 4:1.

Factory Act

Peel's promise of modest reform was held to, and the second most famous bill of this ministry, while "reforming" in 21st-century eyes, was in fact aimed at the reformers themselves, with their constituency among the new industrial rich. The Factory Act 1844 acted more against these industrialists than it did against the traditional stronghold of the Conservatives, the landed gentry, by restricting the number of hours that children and women could work in a factory and setting rudimentary safety standards for machinery.[65] This was a continuation of his own father's work as an MP, as the elder Robert Peel was most noted for the reform of working conditions during the first part of the 19th century. Helping him was Lord Shaftesbury, a British MP who also established the coal mines act.

In 1843 Peel was the target of a failed assassination attempt; a criminally insane Scottish woodturner named Daniel M'Naghten stalked him for several days before, on 20 January, killing Peel's personal secretary Edward Drummond thinking he was Peel,[66] which led to the formation of the controversial criminal defence of insanity.[67]

Corn Laws

The most notable act of Peel's second ministry, however, was the one that would bring it down.[68] Peel moved against the landholders by repealing the Corn Laws, which supported agricultural revenues by restricting grain imports.[69] This radical break with Conservative protectionism was triggered by the Great Irish Famine (1845–1849).[70] Tory agriculturalists were sceptical of the extent of the problem,[71] and Peel reacted slowly to the famine, famously stating in October 1846 (already in opposition): "There is such a tendency to exaggeration and inaccuracy in Irish reports that delay in acting on them is always desirable".[72]

His own party failed to support the bill, but it passed with Whig and Radical support. On the third reading of Peel's Bill of Repeal (Importation Act 1846) on 15 May, MPs voted 327 votes to 229 (a majority of 98) to repeal the Corn Laws. On 25 June the Duke of Wellington persuaded the House of Lords to pass it. On that same night Peel's Irish Coercion Bill was defeated in the Commons by 292 to 219 by "a combination of Whigs, Radicals, and Tory protectionists".[73] Following this, on 29 June 1846, Peel resigned as prime minister.[74]

Though he knew repealing the laws would mean the end of his ministry, Peel decided to do so.[75] It is possible that Peel merely used the Irish Famine as an excuse to repeal the Corn Laws as he had been an intellectual convert to free trade since the 1820s. Blake points out that if Peel had been convinced that total repeal was necessary to stave off the famine, he would have enacted a bill that brought about immediate temporary repeal, not permanent repeal over a three-year period of gradual tapering-off of duties.[76] Peel's support for free trade could already be seen in his 1842 and 1845 budgets;[77] in late 1842 Graham wrote to Peel that "the next change in the Corn Laws must be to an open trade" while arguing that the government should not tackle the issue.[78] Speaking to the cabinet in 1844, Peel argued that the choice was the maintenance of the 1842 Corn Law or total repeal.[79] The historian Boyd Hilton argued that Peel knew from 1844 he was going to be deposed as the Conservative leader. Many of his MPs had taken to voting against him, and the rupture within the party between liberals and paternalists, which had been so damaging in the 1820s but masked by the issue of parliamentary reform in the 1830s, was brought to the surface over the Corn Laws. Hilton's hypothesis is that Peel wished to be deposed on a liberal issue so that he might later lead a Peelite/Whig/Liberal alliance. Peel was magnanimous towards Irish famine and permitted quick settlements of disputes at frontiers in India and America ( Treaty of Amritsar (1846) on 16 March 1846 and Oregon Treaty on 15 June 1846) in order to repeal Corn Laws on 29 June 1846.[80] As an aside in reference to the repeal of the Corn Laws, Peel managed to keep minimum casualties of Irish Famine in its first year, Peel did make some moves to subsidise the purchase of food for the Irish, but this attempt was small and had little tangible effect. In the age of laissez-faire,[81] government taxes were small, and subsidies or direct economic interference was almost nonexistent. That subsidies were actually given was very much out of character for the political times; his successor, Lord John Russell, received more criticism than Peel on Irish policy, the worst year being 1847, despite all of Peel's efforts, his reform programs had little effect on the situation in Ireland.[82] Russell couldn't manage public distribution system during Irish Famine even though subsidized food from USA was made available in Ireland. The repeal of the Corn Laws became more political than humanitarian.[83]

Later career and death

Peel did, however, retain a hard core of supporters, known as Peelites,[84] and at one point in 1849 was actively courted by the Whig/Radical coalition. He continued to stand on his conservative principles, however, and refused. Nevertheless, he was influential on several important issues, including the furtherance of British free trade with the repeal of the Navigation Acts.[85] Peel was a member of the committee which controlled the House of Commons Library, and on 16 April 1850 was responsible for passing the motion that controlled its scope and collection policy for the rest of the century.

Peel was thrown from his horse while riding on Constitution Hill in London on 29 June 1850. The horse stumbled on top of him, and he died three days later on 2 July at the age of 62 due to a broken collarbone rupturing his subclavian vessels.[86]

His Peelite followers, led by Lord Aberdeen and William Gladstone, went on to fuse with the Whigs as the Liberal Party.[87]

Family

 
Thomas Lawrence's portrait of his patron Julia, Lady Peel (1827), now in the Frick Collection.[88]

Peel became engaged to Julia Floyd (1795–1859) (daughter of General Sir John Floyd, 1st Baronet, and his first wife Rebecca Darke) in March 1820 and was married on 8 June 1820.[89] They had seven children:[90]

  • Julia Peel (30 April 1821 – 14 August 1893). She married George Child Villiers, 6th Earl of Jersey, on 12 July 1841. They had five children. She married her second husband, Charles Brandling, on 12 September 1865.
  • Sir Robert Peel, 3rd Baronet (4 May 1822 – 9 May 1895). He married Lady Emily Hay on 17 June 1856. They had five children.
  • Sir Frederick Peel (26 October 1823 – 6 June 1906). He married Elizabeth Shelley (niece of the poet Percy Shelley through his brother John: died 30 July 1865) on 12 August 1857. He was remarried to Janet Pleydell-Bouverie on 3 September 1879.
  • Sir William Peel (2 November 1824 – 27 April 1858).
  • John Floyd Peel (24 May 1827 – 21 April 1910). He married Annie Jenny in 1851.
  • Arthur Wellesley Peel (3 August 1829 – 24 October 1912). He married Adelaide Dugdale, daughter of William Stratford Dugdale and Harriet Ella Portman, on 14 August 1862. They had seven children. In 1895 he became Viscount Peel and was father of the first Earl Peel.
  • Eliza Peel (c. 1832 – April 1883). She married Hon. Francis Stonor (son of Thomas Stonor, 3rd Baron Camoys) on 25 September 1855. They had four children.

Julia, Lady Peel, died in 1859. Some of her direct descendants now reside in South Africa, the Australian states of New South Wales, Queensland, Victoria and Tasmania, and in various parts of the United States and Canada.[citation needed]

Memory and legacy

 
Portrait of Robert Peel by Thomas Lawrence

In his lifetime many critics called him a traitor to the Tory cause, or as "a Liberal wolf in sheep's clothing", because his final position reflected liberal ideas.[91]

The consensus view of scholars for much of the 20th century idealised Peel in heroic terms. Historian Boyd Hilton wrote that he was portrayed as:

The great Conservative patriot: a pragmatic gradualist, as superb in his grasp of fundamental issues as he was adroit in handling administrative detail, intelligent enough to see through abstract theories, a conciliator who put nation before party and established consensus politics.[92]

Biographer Norman Gash wrote that Peel "looked first, not to party, but to the state; not to programmes, but to national expediency".[93] Gash added that among his personal qualities were, "administrative skill, capacity for work, personal integrity, high standards, a sense of duty [and] an outstanding intellect".[94]

Gash emphasised the role of personality in Peel's political career:

Peel was endowed with great intelligence and integrity, and an immense capacity for hard work. A proud, stubborn, and quick-tempered man he had a passion for creative achievement; and the latter part of his life was dominated by his deep concern for the social condition of the country. Though his great debating and administrative talents secured him an outstanding position in Parliament, his abnormal sensitivity and coldness of manner debarred him from popularity among his political followers, except for the small circle of his intimate friends. As an administrator he was one of the greatest public servants in British history; in politics he was a principal architect of the modern conservative tradition. By insisting on changes unpalatable to many of his party, he helped to preserve the flexibility of the parliamentary system and the survival of aristocratic influence. The repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 won him immense prestige in the country, and his death in 1850 caused a national demonstration of sorrow unprecedented since the death of William Pitt in 1806.[95]

Peel was the first serving British Prime Minister to have his photograph taken.[96] Peel is also featured on the cover of The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album.

A 2021 study in the Economic Journal found that the repeal of the corn laws adversely affected the welfare of the top 10% of income earners in Britain, whereas the bottom 90% of income earners gained.[97]

Memorials

Statues

Statues of Sir Robert Peel are found in the following British and Australian locations:

Public houses and hotels

The following public houses, bars or hotels are named after Peel:[99]

United Kingdom

 
Sir Robert Peel pub, Leicester.
  • Sir Robert Peel pub Bury, behind his statue Former Wetherspoon.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, Tamworth.[100]
  • Peel Hotel, Tamworth.[101]
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, Edgeley, Stockport, Cheshire.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, Heckmondwike, West Yorkshire.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house,[102] Leicester.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, Malden Road, London NW5.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, Peel Precinct, Kilburn, London NW6.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, London SE17.
  • Sir Robert Peel Hotel, Preston.
  • Peel Park Hotel, Accrington, Lancashire.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house Rowley Regis.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, Southsea.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house,[103] Stoke-on-Trent.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey.
  • Sir Robert Peel public house, Bloxwich, Walsall.[104]

Elsewhere

  • The Sir Robert Peel Hotel (colloquially known as "The Peel"), a gay bar and nightclub located at the corner of Peel and Wellington Streets in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood, in Australia.
  • The Sir Robert Peel Hotel on the corner of Queensberry Street and Peel Street in the Melbourne suburb of North Melbourne, Victoria, in Australia.
  • The Sir Robert Peel Motor Lodge Hotel, Alexandria Bay, New York.

Other memorials

In literature

Letitia Elizabeth Landon gave her tribute to Sir Robert in her poetical illustration Sir Robert Peel to Thomas Lawrence's portrait in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1837.[108]

Robert Peel is a secondary character in the novel Dodger by Terry Pratchett.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Peel, Arthur George Villiers (1895). "Peel, Robert (1788-1850)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  2. ^ A. J. P. Taylor, Politicians, Socialism and Historians (1980) p. 75
  3. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 2–11.
  4. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 490; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 4, 119.
  5. ^ Houseman, J. W. (1951). "An Old Lithograph of Some Historical Interest and Importance: The Early Education of Sir Robert Peel". The Yorkshire Archæological Journal. 37: 72–79. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  6. ^ Jenkins, T.A. (1998). Sir Robert Peel. p. 5. ISBN 9780333983430. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  7. ^ Clarke (1832). The Georgian Era: Memoirs of the most eminent persons, who have flourished in Great Britain. Vol. 1. p. 418. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  8. ^ Hurd, Douglas (2007). Robert Peel: A Biography. ISBN 9781780225968. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  9. ^ Foster, Joseph (1888–1892). "Peel, (Sir) Robert (Bart.) (1)" . Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715–1886. Oxford: Parker and Co – via Wikisource.
  10. ^ Hurd, Douglas (2007). Robert Peel: A Biography. ISBN 9781780225968. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  11. ^ Hurd, Douglas (2007). Robert Peel: A Biography. ISBN 9781780225968. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  12. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 11–12.
  13. ^ Hurd, Douglas (2007). Robert Peel: A Biography. ISBN 9781780225968. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  14. ^ "No. 16264". The London Gazette. 6–10 June 1809. p. 827.
  15. ^ "PEEL, Robert (1788-1850)". History of Parliament Online.
  16. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: ', 1; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 13; 376.
  17. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 18.
  18. ^ Gash, Mr. Secretary Peel, 59–61, 68–69.
  19. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 12, 18, 35.
  20. ^ OED entry at peeler (3)
  21. ^ Gaunt, Richard A. (2010). Sir Robert Peel: The Life and Legacy. ISBN 9780857716842. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  22. ^ Hurd, Douglas (2007). Robert Peel: A Biography. ISBN 9781780225968. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  23. ^ Robert Peel, Chief Secretary for Ireland (9 May 1817). "Roman Catholic Question". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). United Kingdom: House of Commons. col. 405–423. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  24. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 6–12; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 18–65, 376.
  25. ^ Adams, Leonard P. (1932). Agricultural Depression and Farm Relief in England 1813-1852. p. 160. ISBN 9781136602672. Retrieved 7 July 2019.
  26. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 3, 9, 13; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 66, 68; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 65.
  27. ^ Gash, 1:477–88.
  28. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 68–71; 122; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 104.
  29. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 4, 96–97; Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 26–28.
  30. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 21–48, 91–100.
  31. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 28–30; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 103–04; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 18.
  32. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 104.
  33. ^ Gaunt, Richard A. (3 March 2014). (PDF). Parliamentary History. 33 (1): 243–262. doi:10.1111/1750-0206.12096. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 February 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  34. ^ Gash, 1:460–65; Richard A. Gaunt, "Peel's Other Repeal: The Test and Corporation Acts, 1828," Parliamentary History (2014) 33#1 pp. 243–62.
  35. ^ Evans, Eric J. (1991). Sir Robert Peel: Statesmanship, Power and Party. ISBN 9781134927821. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  36. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 35–40; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 46–47, 110, 376.
  37. ^ Gash, 1:564–65
  38. ^ Holmes, Richard (2002). Wellington: The Iron Duke. p. 77.
  39. ^ Thompson, N. Wellington after Waterloo. p. 95.
  40. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 37–39; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 114–21.
  41. ^ Gash, 1:545–98
  42. ^ Evans, Eric J. (1991). Sir Robert Peel: Statesmanship, Power and Party. ISBN 9781134225231. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  43. ^ Gash, 1:488-98.
  44. ^ "How policing started in England". Old Police Cells Museum. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  45. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 87–90.
  46. ^ Susan Lentz and Robert H. Chaires, "The invention of Peel's principles: A study of policing ‘textbook’ history"
  47. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 123–40.
  48. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 45–50; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 136–41.
  49. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 51–62, 64–90, 129–43, 146–77, 193–201; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 179; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 66.
  50. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 196–97, 199; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 66–67.
  51. ^ The Routledge Dictionary of Modern British History, John Plowright, Routledge, Abingdon, 2006. p235
  52. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 210–15; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 184; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 12; 69–72.
  53. ^ Lowe, Norman (2017). Mastering Modern British History. Macmillan Education UK. p. 59. ISBN 9781137603883.
  54. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 227; 229–35; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 185–87; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 71–73.
  55. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 250–54, 257–61; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 188–92; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 74–76.
  56. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 224–26.
  57. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 417–18; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 206.
  58. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 416–17; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 206–07.
  59. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 207–208; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 89.
  60. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 23; Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 419–26; 448; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 208–09; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 89–91.
  61. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 24.
  62. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 35–36; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 227; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 112.
  63. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 37; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 235; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 113–14.
  64. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 35–36; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 112–13.
  65. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 40–42; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 302–05; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 125; 129.
  66. ^ Read, Peel and the Victorians, 121–22.
  67. ^ "Old Bailey Online – The Proceedings of the Old Bailey, 1674–1913 – Central Criminal Court". www.oldbaileyonline.org. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  68. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 113–15.
  69. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, vi.
  70. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 66; Ramsay; Sir Robert Peel, 332–33.
  71. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 72.
  72. ^ Peel, Sir Robert (January 1899). Sir Robert Peel: In Early Life, 1788-1812; as Irish Secretary, 1812-1818; and as Secretary of State, 1822-1827. J. Murray. p. 223. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
  73. ^ Schonhardt-Bailey, p. 239.
  74. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 68–69, 70, 72; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 347; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 230–31.
  75. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 67–69.
  76. ^ Blake, Disraeli, 221-222.
  77. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, pp. 35–37, 59.
  78. ^ Quoted in Gash, Sir Robert Peel, 362.
  79. ^ Gash, Sir Robert Peel, 429.
  80. ^ Hurd, Robert Peel: A Biography, 43.
  81. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 70.
  82. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, pp. 48–49.
  83. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 69–71.
  84. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 78–80; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 353–55.
  85. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 78; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 377; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 257.
  86. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 80; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 361–63; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 1; 266–70.
  87. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 86–87; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 364.
  88. ^ "Thomas Sir Lawrence – Julia, Lady Peel: The Frick Collection". Collections.frick.org. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  89. ^ "Peel, Sir Robert, second baronet (1788–1850), prime minister". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21764. Retrieved 2 January 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  90. ^ Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003). Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage. Vol. 1 (107th ed.). Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd. p. 659.
  91. ^ Richard A. Gaunt (2010). Sir Robert Peel: The Life and Legacy. I.B.Tauris. p. 3. ISBN 9780857716842.
  92. ^ Boyd Hilton, "Peel: A Reappraisal," Historical Journal 22#3 (1979) pp. 585–614 quote p 587
  93. ^ Gash, vol 1, pp 13–14.
  94. ^ Gash, vol 2, pg 712.
  95. ^ Norman Gash, "Peel, Sir Robert" Collier Encyclopedia (1996) v 15 p 528.
  96. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 86–87; Ramsay, 365.
  97. ^ Irwin, Douglas A; Chepeliev, Maksym G (2021). "The Economic Consequences of Sir Robert Peel: A Quantitative Assessment of the Repeal of the Corn Laws*". The Economic Journal. 131 (ueab029): 3322–3337. doi:10.1093/ej/ueab029. ISSN 0013-0133.
  98. ^ . Panoramio.com. Archived from the original on 21 August 2018. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  99. ^ The UK-based Peel Hotels group are named after their founders Robert and Charles Peel, not Sir Robert Peel
  100. ^ "The Sir Robert Peel / Public House". Facebook.
  101. ^ "Peel Hotel Aldergate Tamworth: Hotels – welcome". Thepeelhotel.com.
  102. ^ . Everards. Archived from the original on 27 September 2006. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  103. ^ "Sir Robert Peel – Dresden – Longton". Thepotteries.org. Retrieved 26 August 2010.
  104. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 October 2007.
  105. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 December 2008. Retrieved 19 September 2008.
  106. ^ Reed 2010, p. 310.
  107. ^ "Bobby". Britannica. Retrieved 12 February 2021. Bobby, slang term for a member of London's Metropolitan Police derived from the name of Sir Robert Peel, who established the force in 1829. Police officers in London are also known as "peelers" for the same reason.
  108. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1836). "poetical illustration". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1837. Fisher, Son & Co.Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1836). "picture". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1837. Fisher, Son & Co.

Further reading

  • Adelman, Paul (1989). Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850. London and New York: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-35557-6.
  • Blake, Robert (1967). Disraeli. New York: St. Martin's Press.
  • Clark, George Kitson (1964). Peel and the Conservative Party: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841. 2nd ed. Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books, The Shoe String Press, Inc.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Cragoe, Matthew (2013). "Sir Robert Peel and the 'Moral Authority'of the House of Commons, 1832–41". English Historical Review. 128 (530): 55–77. doi:10.1093/ehr/ces357.
  • Davis, Richard W (1980). "Toryism to Tamworth: The Triumph of Reform, 1827–1835". Albion. 12 (2): 132–146. doi:10.2307/4048814. JSTOR 4048814.
  • Evans, Eric J. (2006). Sir Robert Peel: Statesmanship, Power and Party (2nd ed.). Lancaster Pamphlets.
  • Farnsworth, Susan H. (1992). The Evolution of British Imperial Policy During the Mid-nineteenth Century: A Study of the Peelite Contribution, 1846–1874. Garland Books.
  • Gash, Norman (1961). Mr. Secretary Peel: The Life of Sir Robert Peel to 1830. New York: Longmans., vol 1 of the standard scholarly biography
    • Gash, Norman (1972). Sir Robert Peel: The Life of Sir Robert Peel after 1830. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-87471-132-5.; vol. 2 of the standard scholarly biography
  • Gash, Norman (1953). Politics in the Age of Peel. Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-87471-132-5.
  • Gaunt, Richard A. (2010). Sir Robert Peel: the life and legacy. London: I.B. Tauris.
  • Halévy, Elie (1961). Victorian years, 1841–1895. A History of the English People. Vol. 4. pp. 5–159.
  • Hurd, Douglas (2007). Robert Peel: A Biography. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-7538-2384-2
  • Newbould, Ian (1983). "Sir Robert Peel and the Conservative Party, 1832–1841: A Study in Failure?". English Historical Review. 98 (388): 529–557. doi:10.1093/ehr/XCVIII.CCCLXXXVIII.529. JSTOR 569783.
  • "Peel, Robert (1788–1850)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. 1895.
  • Prest, John (May 2009) [2004]. "Peel, Sir Robert, second baronet (1788–1850)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/21764. Retrieved 17 September 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Ramsay, A.A.W. (1928). Sir Robert Peel.
  • Read, Donald (1987). Peel and the Victorians. Oxford: Basil Blackwell Ltd: Basil Blackwell Ltd. ISBN 978-0-631-15725-0.
  • Reed, A. W. (2010). Peter Dowling (ed.). Place Names of New Zealand. Rosedale, North Shore: Raupo. ISBN 9780143204107.

Historiography

  • Gaunt, Richard A. (2010). Sir Robert Peel: The Life and Legacy. IB Tauris.
  • Hilton, Boyd (1979). "Peel: a reappraisal". Historical Journal. 22 (3): 585–614. doi:10.1017/s0018246x00017003. JSTOR 2638656. S2CID 161856932.
  • Lentz, Susan A.; Smith, Robert H.; Chaires, R.A. (2007). "The invention of Peel's principles: A study of policing 'textbook' history". Journal of Criminal Justice. 35: 69–79. doi:10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2006.11.016.
  • Loades, David Michael (2003). Reader's guide to British history. Vol. 2. Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers.

Primary sources

  • Parker, C.S. (1899), Sir Robert Peel: from his private papers (vol 1 online), vol. 3 vols. 1891–99, London: John Murray
  • Peel, Sir Robert; (Earl), Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope; Cardwell, Viscount Edward Cardwell (1857), "Memoirs by the Right Honourable Sir Robert Peel" (vol 2–3 online), (3 vol 1856–57), vol. 1 online

External links

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Sir Robert Peel, Bt
  • on the Downing Street website.
  • Biography of Sir Robert Peel at www.victorianweb.org
  • An overview of the career of Sir Robert Peel at www.victorianweb.org
  • The Peel Web For A-level History students
  • Sir Robert Peel, a memorial biography by H. Morse Stephens
  • Works by or about Robert Peel at Internet Archive
  • Works by Robert Peel at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • "Archival material relating to Robert Peel". UK National Archives.  
  • Portraits of Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Bt at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
Political offices
Preceded by Chief Secretary for Ireland
1812–1818
Succeeded by
Preceded by Home Secretary
1822–1827
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the House of Commons
1828–1830
Succeeded by
Preceded by Home Secretary
1828–1830
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
The Viscount Melbourne
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
10 December 1834 – 8 April 1835
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1834–1835
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the House of Commons
1834–1835
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
30 August 1841 – 29 June 1846
Preceded by Leader of the House of Commons
1841–1846
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Cashel
1809–1812
Succeeded by
Sir Charles Saxton, Bt
Preceded by
John Maitland
James Dawkins
Member of Parliament for Chippenham
1812–1817
With: Charles Brooke
Succeeded by
Charles Brooke
John Maitland
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Oxford University
1817–1829
With: William Scott 1817–1821
Richard Heber 1821–1826
Thomas Grimston Estcourt 1826–1829
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Westbury
1829–1830
With: Sir George Warrender
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Tamworth
1830–1850
With: Lord Charles Townshend 1830–1835
William Yates Peel 1835–1837, 1847
Edward Henry A'Court 1837–1847
John Townshend 1847–1850
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the British Conservative Party
1834–1846
Succeeded by
First
None recognised before
Conservative Leader in the Commons
1834–1846
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by Rector of the University of Glasgow
1836–1838
Succeeded by
Baronetage of Great Britain
Preceded by Baronet
(of Drayton Manor and Bury)
1830 – 1850
Succeeded by

robert, peel, other, people, named, disambiguation, baronet, february, 1788, july, 1850, british, conservative, statesman, served, twice, prime, minister, united, kingdom, 1834, 1835, 1841, 1846, simultaneously, serving, chancellor, exchequer, 1834, 1835, twic. For other people named Robert Peel see Robert Peel disambiguation Sir Robert Peel 2nd Baronet FRS 5 February 1788 2 July 1850 was a British Conservative statesman who served twice as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 1834 1835 and 1841 1846 simultaneously serving as Chancellor of the Exchequer 1834 1835 and twice as Home Secretary 1822 1827 and 1828 1830 He is regarded as the father of modern British policing owing to his founding of the Metropolitan Police Service Peel was one of the founders of the modern Conservative Party The Right Honourable SirRobert PeelBt FRSDetail of a portrait paintingby Henry William PickersgillPrime Minister of the United KingdomIn office 30 August 1841 29 June 1846MonarchVictoriaPreceded byThe Viscount MelbourneSucceeded byLord John RussellIn office 10 December 1834 8 April 1835MonarchWilliam IVPreceded byThe Duke of WellingtonSucceeded byThe Viscount MelbourneChancellor of the ExchequerIn office 15 December 1834 8 April 1835Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byThe Lord DenmanSucceeded byThomas Spring RiceHome SecretaryIn office 26 January 1828 22 November 1830Prime MinisterThe Duke of WellingtonPreceded byThe Marquess of LansdowneSucceeded byThe Viscount MelbourneIn office 17 January 1822 10 April 1827Prime MinisterThe Earl of LiverpoolPreceded byThe Viscount SidmouthSucceeded byWilliam Sturges BourneChief Secretary for IrelandIn office August 1812 August 1818Prime MinisterThe Earl of LiverpoolPreceded byThe Earl of MorningtonSucceeded byCharles GrantPersonal detailsBorn 1788 02 05 5 February 1788Bury Lancashire EnglandDied2 July 1850 1850 07 02 aged 62 Westminster Middlesex EnglandResting placeSt Peter Churchyard Drayton BassettPolitical partyTory 1809 1834 Conservative 1834 1846 Peelite 1846 1850 SpouseJulia Floyd m 1820 wbr ChildrenJulia Robert Frederick William John Arthur ElizaParent s Sir Robert Peel 1st Baronet Ellen YatesEducationHarrow SchoolAlma materChrist Church Oxford BA Lincoln s InnSignatureMilitary serviceYears of service1820RankLieutenantUnitStaffordshire YeomanryThe son of a wealthy textile manufacturer and politician Peel was the first prime minister from an industrial business background He earned a double first in classics and mathematics from Christ Church Oxford He entered the House of Commons in 1809 and became a rising star in the Tory Party Peel entered the Cabinet as Home Secretary 1822 1827 where he reformed and liberalised the criminal law and created the modern police force leading to a new type of officer known in tribute to him as bobbies and peelers After a brief period out of office he returned as Home Secretary under his political mentor the Duke of Wellington 1828 1830 also serving as Leader of the House of Commons Initially a supporter of continued legal discrimination against Catholics Peel reversed himself and supported the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 and the 1828 repeal of the Test Act claiming that though emancipation was a great danger civil strife was a greater danger 1 After being in Opposition from 1830 to 1834 he became Prime Minister in November 1834 Peel issued the Tamworth Manifesto December 1834 laying down the principles upon which the modern British Conservative Party is based His first ministry was a minority government dependent on Whig support and with Peel serving as his own Chancellor of the Exchequer After only four months his government collapsed and he served as Leader of the Opposition during Melbourne s second government 1835 1841 Peel became Prime Minister again after the 1841 general election His second government ruled for five years He cut tariffs to stimulate trade replacing the lost revenue with a 3 income tax He played a central role in making free trade a reality and set up a modern banking system His government s major legislation included the Mines and Collieries Act 1842 the Income Tax Act 1842 the Factories Act 1844 and the Railway Regulation Act 1844 Peel s government was weakened by anti Catholic sentiment following the controversial increase in the Maynooth Grant of 1845 After the outbreak of the Great Irish Famine his decision to join with Whigs and Radicals to repeal the Corn Laws led to his resignation as Prime Minister in 1846 Peel remained an influential MP and leader of the Peelite faction until his death in 1850 Peel often started from a traditional Tory position in opposition to a measure then reversed his stance and became the leader in supporting liberal legislation This happened with the Test Act Catholic Emancipation the Reform Act income tax and most notably the repeal of the Corn Laws Historian A J P Taylor wrote Peel was in the first rank of 19th century statesmen He carried Catholic Emancipation he repealed the Corn Laws he created the modern Conservative Party on the ruins of the old Toryism 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early political career 2 1 Member of Parliament 2 2 In Cabinet 2 2 1 Home Secretary 2 3 Tory Opposition 3 First term as Prime Minister 1834 1835 4 Leader of the Opposition 1835 1841 5 Second term as Prime Minister 1841 1846 5 1 Economic and financial reforms 5 2 Factory Act 5 3 Corn Laws 6 Later career and death 7 Family 8 Memory and legacy 9 Memorials 9 1 Statues 9 2 Public houses and hotels 9 2 1 United Kingdom 9 2 2 Elsewhere 9 3 Other memorials 9 4 In literature 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 Historiography 12 2 Primary sources 13 External linksEarly life EditPeel was born at Chamber Hall Bury Lancashire to the industrialist and parliamentarian Sir Robert Peel 1st Baronet and his wife Ellen Yates His father was one of the richest textile manufacturers of the early Industrial Revolution 3 The family moved from Lancashire to Drayton Manor near Tamworth Staffordshire the manor house has since been demolished and the site occupied by Drayton Manor Theme Park 4 Peel received his early education from a clergyman tutor in Bury and at a clergyman s local school in Tamworth 1 He may also have attended Bury Grammar School or Hipperholme Grammar School though evidence for either is anecdotal rather than textual 5 He started at Harrow School in February 1800 6 At Harrow he was a contemporary of Lord Byron who recalled of Peel that we were on good terms and that I was always in scrapes and he never 7 On Harrow s Speech Day in 1804 Peel and Byron acted part of Virgil s Aeneid Peel playing Turnus and Byron playing Latinus 1 8 Christ Church Oxford which Peel attended 1805 1808 graduating with a double first He was later MP for the university 1817 1829 In 1805 Peel matriculated at Christ Church Oxford 9 His tutor was Charles Lloyd later Regius Professor of Divinity 10 on Peel s recommendation appointed Bishop of Oxford 11 In 1808 Peel became the first Oxford student to take a double first in Classics and Mathematics 12 Peel was a law student at Lincoln s Inn in 1809 13 He also held military commissions as a captain in the Manchester Regiment of Militia in 1808 14 and later as lieutenant in the Staffordshire Yeomanry Cavalry in 1820 15 Early political career EditMember of Parliament Edit Peel entered politics in 1809 at the age of 21 as MP for the Irish rotten borough of Cashel Tipperary 16 With a scant 24 electors on the rolls he was elected unopposed His sponsor for the election besides his father was the Chief Secretary for Ireland Sir Arthur Wellesley the future Duke of Wellington with whom Peel s political career would be entwined for the next 25 years Peel made his maiden speech at the start of the 1810 session when he was chosen by Prime Minister Spencer Perceval to second the reply to the king s speech 17 His speech was a sensation famously described by the Speaker Charles Abbot as the best first speech since that of William Pitt 18 Peel changed constituency twice becoming one of the two Members for Chippenham in 1812 and then one of those for Oxford University in 1817 19 In 1810 Peel was appointed an Under Secretary of State for War and the Colonies his Secretary of State was Lord Liverpool 1 When Lord Liverpool formed a government in 1812 Peel was appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland 1 The Peace Preservation Act of 1814 authorised the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to appoint additional magistrates in a county in a state of disturbance who were authorised to appoint paid special constables later called peelers 20 Peel thus laid the basis for the Royal Irish Constabulary 21 Peel was firmly opposed to Catholic emancipation believing that Catholics could not be admitted to Parliament as they refused to swear the Oath of Allegiance to the Crown 22 In May 1817 Peel delivered the closing speech in opposition to Henry Grattan s Catholic emancipation bill the bill was defeated by 245 votes to 221 23 Peel resigned as Chief Secretary and left Ireland in August 1818 1 In 1819 the House of Commons appointed a Select Committee the Bullion Committee charged with stabilising British finances after the end of the Napoleonic Wars and Peel was chosen as its chairman 24 Peel s Bill planned to return British currency to the gold standard reversing the Bank Restriction Act 1797 within four years it was actually accomplished by 1821 25 In Cabinet Edit Home Secretary Edit Further information Victorian morality Crime and police The Duke of Wellington Prime Minister 1828 1830 with Peel Peel was considered one of the rising stars of the Tory party first entering the cabinet in 1822 as Home Secretary 26 As Home Secretary he introduced a number of important reforms to British criminal law 27 He reduced the number of crimes punishable by death and simplified the law by repealing a large number of criminal statutes and consolidating their provisions into what are known as Peel s Acts He reformed the gaol system introducing payment for gaolers and education for the inmates in the Gaols Act 1823 28 In 1827 the Prime Minister Lord Liverpool became incapacitated and was replaced by George Canning Peel resigned as home secretary 29 Canning favoured Catholic emancipation while Peel had been one of its most outspoken opponents earning the nickname Orange Peel with Orange the colour of the anti Catholic Orange Order 30 George Canning himself died less than four months later and after the brief premiership of Lord Goderich Peel returned to the post of Home Secretary under the premiership of his long time ally the Duke of Wellington 31 During this time he was widely perceived as the number two in the Tory Party after Wellington himself 32 The Test and Corporation Acts required many officials to be communicants in the Anglican Church and penalised both nonconformists and Catholics They were no longer enforced but were a matter of humiliation Peel at first opposed the repeal but reversed himself and led the repeal on behalf of the government after consultation with Anglican Church leaders 33 The Sacramental Test Act 1828 passed into law in May 1828 In future religious issues he made it a point to consult with church leaders from the major denominations 34 The 1828 Clare by election returned the Catholic Irish nationalist leader Daniel O Connell By autumn 1828 the Chief Secretary for Ireland was alarmed by the extent of civil disorder and the prospect of a rebellion 35 if O Connell were barred from Parliament Wellington and Peel now conceded the necessity of Catholic emancipation Peel writing to Wellington that though emancipation was a great danger civil strife was a greater danger 1 Peel drew up the Catholic Relief bill Peel felt compelled to stand for re election to his seat in Oxford as he was representing the graduates of Oxford University many of whom were Anglican clergymen and had previously stood on a platform of opposition to Catholic Emancipation 36 Peel lost his seat in a by election in February 1829 but soon found another moving to a rotten borough Westbury retaining his Cabinet position 37 He stood for Tamworth in the general election of 1830 representing Tamworth until his death Peel guided the Catholic relief bill through the House of Commons Wellington through the House of Lords With many Ultra Tories vehemently opposed to emancipation the bill could pass only with Whig support 38 Wellington threatened to resign if King George IV did not give Royal assent 39 the King finally relented the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 passing into law in April 1829 Peel s U turn cost him the trust of many Tories 40 according to Norman Gash Peel had been the idolized champion of the Protestant party that party now regarded him as an outcast 41 42 This satirical 1829 cartoon by William Heath depicted the Duke of Wellington and Peel in the roles of the body snatchers Burke and Hare suffocating Mrs Docherty for sale to Dr Knox representing the extinguishing by Wellington and Peel of the 141 year old Constitution of 1688 by Catholic Emancipation It was in 1829 that Peel established the Metropolitan Police Force for London based at Scotland Yard 43 The 1 000 constables employed were affectionately nicknamed bobbies or somewhat less affectionately peelers Although unpopular at first they proved very successful in cutting crime in London 44 and by 1857 all cities in Britain were obliged to form their own police forces 45 Known as the father of modern policing Peel is thought to have contributed to the Metropolitan Police s first set of Instructions to Police Officers emphasising the importance of its civilian nature and policing by consent However what are now commonly known as the Peelian Principles were not written by him but were instead produced by Charles Reith in his 1948 book A Short History of the British Police as a nine point summary of the 1829 Instructions 46 Tory Opposition Edit The middle and working classes in England at that time however were clamouring for reform and Catholic Emancipation was only one of the ideas in the air 47 The Tory ministry refused to bend on other issues and were swept out of office in 1830 in favour of the Whigs 48 The following few years were extremely turbulent but eventually enough reforms were passed that King William IV felt confident enough to invite the Tories to form a ministry again in succession to those of Lord Grey and Lord Melbourne in December 1834 49 Peel was selected as prime minister but was in Italy at the time so Wellington acted as a caretaker for three weeks until Peel s return 50 First term as Prime Minister 1834 1835 EditFurther information First Peel ministry The Tory Ministry was a minority government and depended on Whig goodwill for its continued existence Parliament was dissolved in December 1834 and a general election was called Voting took place in January and February 1835 and Peel s supporters gained around 100 seats but this was not enough to give them a majority 51 As his statement of policy at the general election of January 1835 Peel issued the Tamworth Manifesto 52 This document was the basis on which the modern Conservative Party was founded In it Peel pledged that the Conservatives would endorse modest reform 53 The Whigs formed a compact with Daniel O Connell s Irish Radical members to repeatedly defeat the government on various bills 54 Eventually after only about 100 days in government Peel s ministry resigned out of frustration and the Whigs under Lord Melbourne returned to power 55 The only real achievement of Peel s first administration was a commission to review the governance of the Church of England This ecclesiastical commission was the forerunner of the Church Commissioners 56 Leader of the Opposition 1835 1841 EditIn May 1839 he was offered another chance to form a government this time by the new monarch Queen Victoria 57 However this too would have been a minority government and Peel felt he needed a further sign of confidence from his Queen Lord Melbourne had been Victoria s confidant since her accession in 1837 and many of the higher posts in Victoria s household were held by the wives and female relatives of Whigs 58 there was some feeling that Victoria had allowed herself to be too closely associated with the Whig party Peel therefore asked that some of this entourage be dismissed and replaced with their Conservative counterparts provoking the so called Bedchamber Crisis 59 Victoria refused to change her household and despite pleadings from the Duke of Wellington relied on assurances of support from Whig leaders Peel refused to form a government and the Whigs returned to power 60 Second term as Prime Minister 1841 1846 EditFurther information Second Peel ministry Engraving showing the members of Sir Robert Peel s government in 1844 Economic and financial reforms Edit Peel finally had a chance to head a majority government following the election of July 1841 61 Peel came to office during an economic recession which had seen a slump in world trade and a budget deficit of 7 5 million run up by the Whigs Confidence in banks and businesses was low and a trade deficit existed To raise revenue Peel s 1842 budget saw the re introduction of the income tax 62 removed previously at the end of the Napoleonic Wars The rate was 7d in the pound or just under 3 per cent The money raised was more than expected and allowed for the removal and reduction of over 1 200 tariffs on imports including the controversial sugar duties 63 It was also in the 1842 budget that the repeal of the corn laws was first proposed 64 It was defeated in a Commons vote by a margin of 4 1 Factory Act Edit Peel s promise of modest reform was held to and the second most famous bill of this ministry while reforming in 21st century eyes was in fact aimed at the reformers themselves with their constituency among the new industrial rich The Factory Act 1844 acted more against these industrialists than it did against the traditional stronghold of the Conservatives the landed gentry by restricting the number of hours that children and women could work in a factory and setting rudimentary safety standards for machinery 65 This was a continuation of his own father s work as an MP as the elder Robert Peel was most noted for the reform of working conditions during the first part of the 19th century Helping him was Lord Shaftesbury a British MP who also established the coal mines act In 1843 Peel was the target of a failed assassination attempt a criminally insane Scottish woodturner named Daniel M Naghten stalked him for several days before on 20 January killing Peel s personal secretary Edward Drummond thinking he was Peel 66 which led to the formation of the controversial criminal defence of insanity 67 Corn Laws Edit The most notable act of Peel s second ministry however was the one that would bring it down 68 Peel moved against the landholders by repealing the Corn Laws which supported agricultural revenues by restricting grain imports 69 This radical break with Conservative protectionism was triggered by the Great Irish Famine 1845 1849 70 Tory agriculturalists were sceptical of the extent of the problem 71 and Peel reacted slowly to the famine famously stating in October 1846 already in opposition There is such a tendency to exaggeration and inaccuracy in Irish reports that delay in acting on them is always desirable 72 His own party failed to support the bill but it passed with Whig and Radical support On the third reading of Peel s Bill of Repeal Importation Act 1846 on 15 May MPs voted 327 votes to 229 a majority of 98 to repeal the Corn Laws On 25 June the Duke of Wellington persuaded the House of Lords to pass it On that same night Peel s Irish Coercion Bill was defeated in the Commons by 292 to 219 by a combination of Whigs Radicals and Tory protectionists 73 Following this on 29 June 1846 Peel resigned as prime minister 74 Though he knew repealing the laws would mean the end of his ministry Peel decided to do so 75 It is possible that Peel merely used the Irish Famine as an excuse to repeal the Corn Laws as he had been an intellectual convert to free trade since the 1820s Blake points out that if Peel had been convinced that total repeal was necessary to stave off the famine he would have enacted a bill that brought about immediate temporary repeal not permanent repeal over a three year period of gradual tapering off of duties 76 Peel s support for free trade could already be seen in his 1842 and 1845 budgets 77 in late 1842 Graham wrote to Peel that the next change in the Corn Laws must be to an open trade while arguing that the government should not tackle the issue 78 Speaking to the cabinet in 1844 Peel argued that the choice was the maintenance of the 1842 Corn Law or total repeal 79 The historian Boyd Hilton argued that Peel knew from 1844 he was going to be deposed as the Conservative leader Many of his MPs had taken to voting against him and the rupture within the party between liberals and paternalists which had been so damaging in the 1820s but masked by the issue of parliamentary reform in the 1830s was brought to the surface over the Corn Laws Hilton s hypothesis is that Peel wished to be deposed on a liberal issue so that he might later lead a Peelite Whig Liberal alliance Peel was magnanimous towards Irish famine and permitted quick settlements of disputes at frontiers in India and America Treaty of Amritsar 1846 on 16 March 1846 and Oregon Treaty on 15 June 1846 in order to repeal Corn Laws on 29 June 1846 80 As an aside in reference to the repeal of the Corn Laws Peel managed to keep minimum casualties of Irish Famine in its first year Peel did make some moves to subsidise the purchase of food for the Irish but this attempt was small and had little tangible effect In the age of laissez faire 81 government taxes were small and subsidies or direct economic interference was almost nonexistent That subsidies were actually given was very much out of character for the political times his successor Lord John Russell received more criticism than Peel on Irish policy the worst year being 1847 despite all of Peel s efforts his reform programs had little effect on the situation in Ireland 82 Russell couldn t manage public distribution system during Irish Famine even though subsidized food from USA was made available in Ireland The repeal of the Corn Laws became more political than humanitarian 83 Later career and death EditPeel did however retain a hard core of supporters known as Peelites 84 and at one point in 1849 was actively courted by the Whig Radical coalition He continued to stand on his conservative principles however and refused Nevertheless he was influential on several important issues including the furtherance of British free trade with the repeal of the Navigation Acts 85 Peel was a member of the committee which controlled the House of Commons Library and on 16 April 1850 was responsible for passing the motion that controlled its scope and collection policy for the rest of the century Peel was thrown from his horse while riding on Constitution Hill in London on 29 June 1850 The horse stumbled on top of him and he died three days later on 2 July at the age of 62 due to a broken collarbone rupturing his subclavian vessels 86 His Peelite followers led by Lord Aberdeen and William Gladstone went on to fuse with the Whigs as the Liberal Party 87 Family Edit Thomas Lawrence s portrait of his patron Julia Lady Peel 1827 now in the Frick Collection 88 Peel became engaged to Julia Floyd 1795 1859 daughter of General Sir John Floyd 1st Baronet and his first wife Rebecca Darke in March 1820 and was married on 8 June 1820 89 They had seven children 90 Julia Peel 30 April 1821 14 August 1893 She married George Child Villiers 6th Earl of Jersey on 12 July 1841 They had five children She married her second husband Charles Brandling on 12 September 1865 Sir Robert Peel 3rd Baronet 4 May 1822 9 May 1895 He married Lady Emily Hay on 17 June 1856 They had five children Sir Frederick Peel 26 October 1823 6 June 1906 He married Elizabeth Shelley niece of the poet Percy Shelley through his brother John died 30 July 1865 on 12 August 1857 He was remarried to Janet Pleydell Bouverie on 3 September 1879 Sir William Peel 2 November 1824 27 April 1858 John Floyd Peel 24 May 1827 21 April 1910 He married Annie Jenny in 1851 Arthur Wellesley Peel 3 August 1829 24 October 1912 He married Adelaide Dugdale daughter of William Stratford Dugdale and Harriet Ella Portman on 14 August 1862 They had seven children In 1895 he became Viscount Peel and was father of the first Earl Peel Eliza Peel c 1832 April 1883 She married Hon Francis Stonor son of Thomas Stonor 3rd Baron Camoys on 25 September 1855 They had four children Julia Lady Peel died in 1859 Some of her direct descendants now reside in South Africa the Australian states of New South Wales Queensland Victoria and Tasmania and in various parts of the United States and Canada citation needed Memory and legacy Edit Portrait of Robert Peel by Thomas Lawrence In his lifetime many critics called him a traitor to the Tory cause or as a Liberal wolf in sheep s clothing because his final position reflected liberal ideas 91 The consensus view of scholars for much of the 20th century idealised Peel in heroic terms Historian Boyd Hilton wrote that he was portrayed as The great Conservative patriot a pragmatic gradualist as superb in his grasp of fundamental issues as he was adroit in handling administrative detail intelligent enough to see through abstract theories a conciliator who put nation before party and established consensus politics 92 Biographer Norman Gash wrote that Peel looked first not to party but to the state not to programmes but to national expediency 93 Gash added that among his personal qualities were administrative skill capacity for work personal integrity high standards a sense of duty and an outstanding intellect 94 Gash emphasised the role of personality in Peel s political career Peel was endowed with great intelligence and integrity and an immense capacity for hard work A proud stubborn and quick tempered man he had a passion for creative achievement and the latter part of his life was dominated by his deep concern for the social condition of the country Though his great debating and administrative talents secured him an outstanding position in Parliament his abnormal sensitivity and coldness of manner debarred him from popularity among his political followers except for the small circle of his intimate friends As an administrator he was one of the greatest public servants in British history in politics he was a principal architect of the modern conservative tradition By insisting on changes unpalatable to many of his party he helped to preserve the flexibility of the parliamentary system and the survival of aristocratic influence The repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846 won him immense prestige in the country and his death in 1850 caused a national demonstration of sorrow unprecedented since the death of William Pitt in 1806 95 Peel was the first serving British Prime Minister to have his photograph taken 96 Peel is also featured on the cover of The Beatles Sgt Pepper s Lonely Hearts Club Band album A 2021 study in the Economic Journal found that the repeal of the corn laws adversely affected the welfare of the top 10 of income earners in Britain whereas the bottom 90 of income earners gained 97 Memorials EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert Peel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Statues Edit Statues of Sir Robert Peel are found in the following British and Australian locations Memorial outside the Robert Peel public house in Bury town centre his birthplace 98 Parliament Square London Peel Park in Accrington Winckley Square in Preston city centre West Midlands Police Training Centre Edgbaston Birmingham Piccadilly Gardens in Manchester Montrose town centre Woodhouse Moor Leeds Tamworth town centre George Square Glasgow Peel Park Bradford Wool Exchange Bradford Peel Centre Hendon Police College Hendon Gawsworth Old Hall Cheshire High Street Dronfield Sandy Bay Tasmania Australia Statue by Edward Hodges Baily in Bury Statue in Parliament Square London Statue in Piccadilly Gardens Manchester Statue in Woodhouse Moor Leeds Statue in George Square Glasgow Statue in Peel Park Bradford Statue near Gawsworth Old Hall Statue in Edgbaston BirminghamPublic houses and hotels Edit The following public houses bars or hotels are named after Peel 99 United Kingdom Edit Sir Robert Peel pub Leicester Sir Robert Peel pub Bury behind his statue Former Wetherspoon Sir Robert Peel public house Tamworth 100 Peel Hotel Tamworth 101 Sir Robert Peel public house Edgeley Stockport Cheshire Sir Robert Peel public house Heckmondwike West Yorkshire Sir Robert Peel public house 102 Leicester Sir Robert Peel public house Malden Road London NW5 Sir Robert Peel public house Peel Precinct Kilburn London NW6 Sir Robert Peel public house London SE17 Sir Robert Peel Hotel Preston Peel Park Hotel Accrington Lancashire Sir Robert Peel public house Rowley Regis Sir Robert Peel public house Southsea Sir Robert Peel public house 103 Stoke on Trent Sir Robert Peel public house Kingston upon Thames Surrey Sir Robert Peel public house Bloxwich Walsall 104 Elsewhere Edit The Sir Robert Peel Hotel colloquially known as The Peel a gay bar and nightclub located at the corner of Peel and Wellington Streets in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood in Australia The Sir Robert Peel Hotel on the corner of Queensberry Street and Peel Street in the Melbourne suburb of North Melbourne Victoria in Australia The Sir Robert Peel Motor Lodge Hotel Alexandria Bay New York Other memorials Edit Peel Park Bradford is named after Sir Robert Peel It is one of the largest parks in the city and indeed Yorkshire Peel Tower Monument built on top of Holcombe Hill in Ramsbottom Bury The Sir Robert Peel Hospital in Tamworth A small monument in the centre of the town of Dronfield in Derbyshire Nearby is the Peel Centre a community centre in a former Methodist church 105 Peel Streets in the CBD of Melbourne and in Collingwood both in Victoria Australia Peel Street in the CBD Adelaide South Australia Peel Street Montreal and its Peel Metro station The street also features a high rise residential building named Sir Robert Peel The Peel River in Tamworth New South Wales Australia Peel High School in Tamworth New South Wales Australia Robert Peel Primary School in Sandy Bedfordshire A British steamer named SS Sir Robert Peel based in Canada was burned by American forces on 29 May 1838 at the height of American Canadian tensions over the Caroline Affair Tamworth raised musician Julian Cope sings the king and queen have offered me the estate of Robert Peel on the song Laughing Boy from his 1984 LP Fried The right wing of the Trafford Centre is called Peel Avenue named after Robert Peel The official mascot of Bury Football Club is Robbie the Bobby in honour of Sir Robert Peel One of the buildings which make up the Home Office headquarters 2 Marsham St is named Peel The Peel building situated on Peel Campus of the University of Salford The Sir Robert Peel monument Cnr George amp High Streets Montrose Scotland Peel Crescent in Mansfield Nottinghamshire UK Peel St and Peel Metro Station in Montreal The street is the main north south axis downtown Peel Street Hong Kong a small street in Hong Kong Peel Street in Simcoe Ontario Canada is named in his honour The Regional Municipality of Peel originally Peel County in Ontario Canada 10 Peel Centre Drive and Peel Centre Peel Regional Police Peel Regional Paramedic Services Dufferin Peel Catholic District School Board Peel District School Board former Peel Memorial Hospital closed 2007 in Brampton Ontario New Zealand pioneer Francis Jollie settled in Canterbury in 1853 and named Peel Forest after the former prime minister as he had died in the year that Canterbury was founded The adjacent mountain and the settlement that formed also took Peel s name 106 The names bobbies and peelers for British police officers 107 Peel s Acts are named after Peel In literature Edit Letitia Elizabeth Landon gave her tribute to Sir Robert in her poetical illustration Sir Robert Peel to Thomas Lawrence s portrait in Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1837 108 Wikisource has original text related to this article Sir Robert Peel a poetical illustration by L E L Robert Peel is a secondary character in the novel Dodger by Terry Pratchett See also EditList of Acts of Parliament during the first Peel ministry List of Acts of Parliament during the second Peel ministry Peelian principles Benjamin HickReferences Edit a b c d e f g Peel Arthur George Villiers 1895 Peel Robert 1788 1850 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 44 London Smith Elder amp Co A J P Taylor Politicians Socialism and Historians 1980 p 75 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 2 11 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 490 Read Peel and the Victorians 4 119 Houseman J W 1951 An Old Lithograph of Some Historical Interest and Importance The Early Education of Sir Robert Peel The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 37 72 79 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Jenkins T A 1998 Sir Robert Peel p 5 ISBN 9780333983430 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Clarke 1832 The Georgian Era Memoirs of the most eminent persons who have flourished in Great Britain Vol 1 p 418 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Hurd Douglas 2007 Robert Peel A Biography ISBN 9781780225968 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Foster Joseph 1888 1892 Peel Sir Robert Bart 1 Alumni Oxonienses the Members of the University of Oxford 1715 1886 Oxford Parker and Co via Wikisource Hurd Douglas 2007 Robert Peel A Biography ISBN 9781780225968 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Hurd Douglas 2007 Robert Peel A Biography ISBN 9781780225968 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 11 12 Hurd Douglas 2007 Robert Peel A Biography ISBN 9781780225968 Retrieved 7 July 2019 No 16264 The London Gazette 6 10 June 1809 p 827 PEEL Robert 1788 1850 History of Parliament Online Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 13 376 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 18 Gash Mr Secretary Peel 59 61 68 69 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 12 18 35 OED entry at peeler 3 Gaunt Richard A 2010 Sir Robert Peel The Life and Legacy ISBN 9780857716842 Retrieved 8 July 2019 Hurd Douglas 2007 Robert Peel A Biography ISBN 9781780225968 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Robert Peel Chief Secretary for Ireland 9 May 1817 Roman Catholic Question Parliamentary Debates Hansard United Kingdom House of Commons col 405 423 Retrieved 8 July 2019 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 6 12 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 18 65 376 Adams Leonard P 1932 Agricultural Depression and Farm Relief in England 1813 1852 p 160 ISBN 9781136602672 Retrieved 7 July 2019 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 3 9 13 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 66 68 Read Peel and the Victorians 65 Gash 1 477 88 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 68 71 122 Read Peel and the Victorians 104 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 4 96 97 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 26 28 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 21 48 91 100 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 28 30 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 103 04 Read Peel and the Victorians 18 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 104 Gaunt Richard A 3 March 2014 Peel s Other Repeal The Test and Corporation Acts 1828 PDF Parliamentary History 33 1 243 262 doi 10 1111 1750 0206 12096 Archived from the original PDF on 23 February 2020 Retrieved 15 September 2019 Gash 1 460 65 Richard A Gaunt Peel s Other Repeal The Test and Corporation Acts 1828 Parliamentary History 2014 33 1 pp 243 62 Evans Eric J 1991 Sir Robert Peel Statesmanship Power and Party ISBN 9781134927821 Retrieved 8 July 2019 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 35 40 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 46 47 110 376 Gash 1 564 65 Holmes Richard 2002 Wellington The Iron Duke p 77 Thompson N Wellington after Waterloo p 95 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 37 39 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 114 21 Gash 1 545 98 Evans Eric J 1991 Sir Robert Peel Statesmanship Power and Party ISBN 9781134225231 Retrieved 8 July 2019 Gash 1 488 98 How policing started in England Old Police Cells Museum Retrieved 26 October 2020 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 87 90 Susan Lentz and Robert H Chaires The invention of Peel s principles A study of policing textbook history Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 123 40 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 45 50 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 136 41 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 51 62 64 90 129 43 146 77 193 201 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 179 Read Peel and the Victorians 66 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 196 97 199 Read Peel and the Victorians 66 67 The Routledge Dictionary of Modern British History John Plowright Routledge Abingdon 2006 p235 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 210 15 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 184 Read Peel and the Victorians 12 69 72 Lowe Norman 2017 Mastering Modern British History Macmillan Education UK p 59 ISBN 9781137603883 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 227 229 35 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 185 87 Read Peel and the Victorians 71 73 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 250 54 257 61 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 188 92 Read Peel and the Victorians 74 76 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 224 26 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 417 18 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 206 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 416 17 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 206 07 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 207 208 Read Peel and the Victorians 89 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 23 Clark Peel and the Conservatives A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 419 26 448 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 208 09 Read Peel and the Victorians 89 91 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 24 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 35 36 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 227 Read Peel and the Victorians 112 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 37 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 235 Read Peel and the Victorians 113 14 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 35 36 Read Peel and the Victorians 112 13 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 40 42 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 302 05 Read Peel and the Victorians 125 129 Read Peel and the Victorians 121 22 Old Bailey Online The Proceedings of the Old Bailey 1674 1913 Central Criminal Court www oldbaileyonline org Retrieved 16 February 2018 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 113 15 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 vi Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 66 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 332 33 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 72 Peel Sir Robert January 1899 Sir Robert Peel In Early Life 1788 1812 as Irish Secretary 1812 1818 and as Secretary of State 1822 1827 J Murray p 223 Retrieved 1 November 2021 Schonhardt Bailey p 239 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 68 69 70 72 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 347 Read Peel and the Victorians 230 31 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 67 69 Blake Disraeli 221 222 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 pp 35 37 59 Quoted in Gash Sir Robert Peel 362 Gash Sir Robert Peel 429 Hurd Robert Peel A Biography 43 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 70 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 pp 48 49 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 69 71 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 78 80 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 353 55 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 78 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 377 Read Peel and the Victorians 257 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 80 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 361 63 Read Peel and the Victorians 1 266 70 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 86 87 Ramsay Sir Robert Peel 364 Thomas Sir Lawrence Julia Lady Peel The Frick Collection Collections frick org Retrieved 28 February 2016 Peel Sir Robert second baronet 1788 1850 prime minister Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21764 Retrieved 2 January 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required Mosley Charles ed 2003 Burke s Peerage Baronetage amp Knightage Vol 1 107th ed Wilmington Delaware U S Burke s Peerage Genealogical Books Ltd p 659 Richard A Gaunt 2010 Sir Robert Peel The Life and Legacy I B Tauris p 3 ISBN 9780857716842 Boyd Hilton Peel A Reappraisal Historical Journal 22 3 1979 pp 585 614 quote p 587 Gash vol 1 pp 13 14 Gash vol 2 pg 712 Norman Gash Peel Sir Robert Collier Encyclopedia 1996 v 15 p 528 Adelman Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 86 87 Ramsay 365 Irwin Douglas A Chepeliev Maksym G 2021 The Economic Consequences of Sir Robert Peel A Quantitative Assessment of the Repeal of the Corn Laws The Economic Journal 131 ueab029 3322 3337 doi 10 1093 ej ueab029 ISSN 0013 0133 Sir Robert Peel Statue Bury Panoramio com Archived from the original on 21 August 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2010 The UK based Peel Hotels group are named after their founders Robert and Charles Peel not Sir Robert Peel The Sir Robert Peel Public House Facebook Peel Hotel Aldergate Tamworth Hotels welcome Thepeelhotel com Sir Robert Peel Leicester Leicestershire Everards Archived from the original on 27 September 2006 Retrieved 26 August 2010 Sir Robert Peel Dresden Longton Thepotteries org Retrieved 26 August 2010 The Sir Robert Peel Pub and Restaurant Bloxwich Walsall West Midlands Archived from the original on 13 October 2007 Peel Centre Archived from the original on 11 December 2008 Retrieved 19 September 2008 Reed 2010 p 310 Bobby Britannica Retrieved 12 February 2021 Bobby slang term for a member of London s Metropolitan Police derived from the name of Sir Robert Peel who established the force in 1829 Police officers in London are also known as peelers for the same reason Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1836 poetical illustration Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1837 Fisher Son amp Co Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1836 picture Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1837 Fisher Son amp Co Further reading EditAdelman Paul 1989 Peel and the Conservative Party 1830 1850 London and New York Longman ISBN 978 0 582 35557 6 Blake Robert 1967 Disraeli New York St Martin s Press Clark George Kitson 1964 Peel and the Conservative Party A Study in Party Politics 1832 1841 2nd ed Hamden Connecticut Archon Books The Shoe String Press Inc a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Cragoe Matthew 2013 Sir Robert Peel and the Moral Authority of the House of Commons 1832 41 English Historical Review 128 530 55 77 doi 10 1093 ehr ces357 Davis Richard W 1980 Toryism to Tamworth The Triumph of Reform 1827 1835 Albion 12 2 132 146 doi 10 2307 4048814 JSTOR 4048814 Evans Eric J 2006 Sir Robert Peel Statesmanship Power and Party 2nd ed Lancaster Pamphlets Farnsworth Susan H 1992 The Evolution of British Imperial Policy During the Mid nineteenth Century A Study of the Peelite Contribution 1846 1874 Garland Books Gash Norman 1961 Mr Secretary Peel The Life of Sir Robert Peel to 1830 New York Longmans vol 1 of the standard scholarly biography Gash Norman 1972 Sir Robert Peel The Life of Sir Robert Peel after 1830 Totowa New Jersey Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 978 0 87471 132 5 vol 2 of the standard scholarly biography Gash Norman 1953 Politics in the Age of Peel Totowa NJ Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 978 0 87471 132 5 Gaunt Richard A 2010 Sir Robert Peel the life and legacy London I B Tauris Halevy Elie 1961 Victorian years 1841 1895 A History of the English People Vol 4 pp 5 159 Hurd Douglas 2007 Robert Peel A Biography London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 7538 2384 2 Newbould Ian 1983 Sir Robert Peel and the Conservative Party 1832 1841 A Study in Failure English Historical Review 98 388 529 557 doi 10 1093 ehr XCVIII CCCLXXXVIII 529 JSTOR 569783 Peel Robert 1788 1850 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 44 1895 Prest John May 2009 2004 Peel Sir Robert second baronet 1788 1850 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21764 Retrieved 17 September 2014 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ramsay A A W 1928 Sir Robert Peel Read Donald 1987 Peel and the Victorians Oxford Basil Blackwell Ltd Basil Blackwell Ltd ISBN 978 0 631 15725 0 Reed A W 2010 Peter Dowling ed Place Names of New Zealand Rosedale North Shore Raupo ISBN 9780143204107 Historiography Edit Gaunt Richard A 2010 Sir Robert Peel The Life and Legacy IB Tauris Hilton Boyd 1979 Peel a reappraisal Historical Journal 22 3 585 614 doi 10 1017 s0018246x00017003 JSTOR 2638656 S2CID 161856932 Lentz Susan A Smith Robert H Chaires R A 2007 The invention of Peel s principles A study of policing textbook history Journal of Criminal Justice 35 69 79 doi 10 1016 j jcrimjus 2006 11 016 Loades David Michael 2003 Reader s guide to British history Vol 2 Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers Primary sources Edit Parker C S 1899 Sir Robert Peel from his private papers vol 1 online vol 3 vols 1891 99 London John Murray Peel Sir Robert Earl Philip Henry Stanhope Stanhope Cardwell Viscount Edward Cardwell 1857 Memoirs by the Right Honourable Sir Robert Peel vol 2 3 online 3 vol 1856 57 vol 1 onlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Peel Wikiquote has quotations related to Robert Peel Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Sir Robert Peel Bt More about Sir Robert Peel on the Downing Street website Biography of Sir Robert Peel at www victorianweb org An overview of the career of Sir Robert Peel at www victorianweb org The Peel Web For A level History students Sir Robert Peel a memorial biography by H Morse Stephens Works by or about Robert Peel at Internet Archive Works by Robert Peel at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Archival material relating to Robert Peel UK National Archives Portraits of Sir Robert Peel 2nd Bt at the National Portrait Gallery London Political officesPreceded byWilliam Wellesley Pole Chief Secretary for Ireland1812 1818 Succeeded byCharles GrantPreceded byThe Viscount Sidmouth Home Secretary1822 1827 Succeeded byWilliam Sturges BournePreceded byWilliam Huskisson Leader of the House of Commons1828 1830 Succeeded byThe Viscount AlthorpPreceded byThe Marquess of Lansdowne Home Secretary1828 1830 Succeeded byThe Viscount MelbourneVacantThe Duke of Wellington as caretakerTitle last held byThe Viscount Melbourne Prime Minister of the United Kingdom10 December 1834 8 April 1835Preceded byThe Lord Denman Chancellor of the Exchequer1834 1835 Succeeded byThomas Spring RicePreceded byLord John Russell Leader of the House of Commons1834 1835 Succeeded byLord John RussellPreceded byThe Viscount Melbourne Prime Minister of the United Kingdom30 August 1841 29 June 1846Preceded byLord John Russell Leader of the House of Commons1841 1846Parliament of the United KingdomPreceded byQuintin Dick Member of Parliament for Cashel1809 1812 Succeeded bySir Charles Saxton BtPreceded byJohn MaitlandJames Dawkins Member of Parliament for Chippenham1812 1817 With Charles Brooke Succeeded byCharles BrookeJohn MaitlandPreceded byWilliam ScottCharles Abbot Member of Parliament for Oxford University1817 1829 With William Scott 1817 1821Richard Heber 1821 1826Thomas Grimston Estcourt 1826 1829 Succeeded byThomas Grimston EstcourtSir Robert InglisPreceded bySir Manasseh Masseh LopesSir George Warrender Member of Parliament for Westbury1829 1830 With Sir George Warrender Succeeded bySir Alexander GrantMichael PrendergastPreceded byWilliam Yates PeelLord Charles Townshend Member of Parliament for Tamworth1830 1850 With Lord Charles Townshend 1830 1835William Yates Peel 1835 1837 1847Edward Henry A Court 1837 1847John Townshend 1847 1850 Succeeded byJohn TownshendSir Robert PeelParty political officesPreceded byThe Duke of Wellington Leader of the British Conservative Party1834 1846 Succeeded byThe Lord StanleyFirstNone recognised before Conservative Leader in the Commons1834 1846 Succeeded byThe Lord George BentinckAcademic officesPreceded byThe Lord Stanley Rector of the University of Glasgow1836 1838 Succeeded bySir James GrahamBaronetage of Great BritainPreceded byRobert Peel Baronet of Drayton Manor and Bury 1830 1850 Succeeded byRobert Peel Portals United Kingdom Biography Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Peel amp oldid 1131887189, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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