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Robert Walpole

Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford, KG, PC (26 August 1676 – 18 March 1745), known between 1725 and 1742 as Sir Robert Walpole, was a British statesman and Whig politician who, as First Lord of the Treasury, Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Leader of the House of Commons, is generally regarded as the de facto first Prime Minister of Great Britain.

The Earl of Orford
Portrait by Jean-Baptiste van Loo, c. 1740
Prime Minister of Great Britain
In office
3 April 1721 – 11 February 1742
Monarchs
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byThe Earl of Wilmington
First Lord of the Treasury
In office
4 April 1721 – 11 February 1742
Preceded byCharles Spencer
Succeeded byThe Earl of Wilmington
In office
10 October 1715 – 12 April 1717
Preceded byThe Earl of Carlisle
Succeeded byThe Earl Stanhope
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
3 April 1721 – 12 February 1742
Preceded bySir John Pratt
Succeeded bySamuel Sandys
In office
12 October 1715 – 15 April 1717
Preceded bySir Richard Onslow
Succeeded byThe Earl Stanhope
Further ministerial offices
Paymaster of the Forces
In office
11 June 1720 – 19 April 1721
Preceded byThe Earl of Lincoln
Succeeded byThe Lord Cornwallis
In office
3 October 1714 – 17 October 1715
Preceded by
Succeeded byThe Earl of Lincoln
Treasurer of the Navy
In office
21 January 1710 – 2 January 1711
Preceded bySir Thomas Littleton
Succeeded byCharles Caesar
Secretary at War
In office
25 February 1708 – 8 August 1710
Preceded byHenry St John
Succeeded byGeorge Granville
Parliamentary offices
Leader of the House of Commons
In office
3 April 1721 – 6 February 1742
Succeeded bySamuel Sandys
Member of Parliament
for King's Lynn
In office
1713 – 6 February 1742
Preceded byJohn Turner
Succeeded byEdward Bacon
In office
11 February 1712 – 6 March 1712
Preceded byVacant
Succeeded byJohn Turner
In office
1702 – 17 January 1712
Preceded bySir John Turner
Succeeded byVacant
Member of Parliament
for Castle Rising
In office
February 1701 – 1702
Preceded byRobert Walpole
Succeeded byHoratio Walpole
Personal details
Born(1676-08-26)26 August 1676
Houghton, Norfolk, England
Died18 March 1745(1745-03-18) (aged 68)
London, England
Resting placeSt Martin at Tours' Church, Houghton
Political partyWhig
Spouses
(m. 1700; died 1737)
(m. 1738; died 1738)
Children6, including Robert, Edward and Horace
Parent
RelativesWalpole family
EducationEton College
Alma materKing's College, Cambridge
Occupation
  • Businessman
  • politician
  • scholar
Signature

Although the exact dates of Walpole's dominance, dubbed the "Robinocracy",[1] are a matter of scholarly debate, the period 1721–1742 is often used. He dominated the Walpole–Townshend ministry, as well as the subsequent Walpole ministry, and holds the record as the longest-serving British prime minister. W.A. Speck wrote that Walpole's uninterrupted run of 20 years as prime minister "is rightly regarded as one of the major feats of British political history. Explanations are usually offered in terms of his expert handling of the political system after 1720, [and] his unique blending of the surviving powers of the crown with the increasing influence of the Commons".[2]

Walpole was a Whig from the gentry class who was first elected to Parliament in 1701 and held many senior positions. He was a country squire and looked to country gentlemen for his political base. Historian F. O'Gorman says his leadership in Parliament reflected his "reasonable and persuasive oratory, his ability to move both the emotions as well as the minds of men, and, above all, his extraordinary self-confidence".[3] Hoppit says Walpole's policies sought moderation, he worked for peace, lower taxes and growing exports and allowed a little more tolerance for Protestant Dissenters. He mostly avoided controversy and high-intensity disputes as his middle way attracted moderates from both the Whig and Tory camps, but his appointment to Chancellor of the Exchequer after the South Sea Bubble stock-market crisis drew attention to perceived protection of political allies by Walpole.[4][5]

H. T. Dickinson sums up his historical role by saying that "Walpole was one of the greatest politicians in British history. He played a significant role in sustaining the Whig party, safeguarding the Hanoverian succession, and defending the principles of the Glorious Revolution (1688). He established stable political supremacy for the Whig party and taught succeeding ministers how best to establish an effective working relationship between Crown and Parliament".[6] Some scholars rank him highly among British prime ministers.[7]

Early life

Walpole was born in Houghton, Norfolk, in 1676. One of 19 children, he was the third son and fifth child of Robert Walpole, a member of the local gentry and a Whig politician who represented the borough of Castle Rising in the House of Commons, and his wife Mary Burwell, the daughter and heiress of Sir Geoffrey Burwell of Rougham, Suffolk. Horatio Walpole, 1st Baron Walpole was his younger brother.[8]

As a child, Walpole attended a private school at Massingham, Norfolk.[9] Walpole entered Eton College in 1690[10] where he was a King's Scholar.[11] He left Eton on 2 April 1696[9] and matriculated at King's College, Cambridge on the same day.[10] On 25 May 1698, he left Cambridge after the death of his only remaining older brother, Edward, so that he could help his father administer the family estate to which he had become the heir. Walpole had planned to become a clergyman but as he was now the eldest surviving son in the family, he abandoned the idea. In November 1700 his father died, and Robert succeeded to inherit the Walpole estate. A paper in his father's handwriting, dated 9 June 1700, shows the family estate in Norfolk and Suffolk to have been nine manors in Norfolk and one in Suffolk.[12]

Early career

Business success

As a young man, Walpole had bought shares in the South Sea Company, which monopolised trade with Spain, the Caribbean, and South America. The speculative market for slaves, rum, and mahogany spawned a frenzy that had ramifications throughout Europe when it collapsed. However, Walpole had bought at the bottom and sold at the top, adding greatly to his inherited wealth and allowing him to create Houghton Hall as seen today.[13][a]

Political career

Walpole's political career began in January 1701 when he won a seat in the English general election at Castle Rising in Norfolk. He left Castle Rising in 1702 so that he could represent the neighbouring borough of King's Lynn, a pocket borough that would re-elect him for the remainder of his political career. Voters and politicians nicknamed him "Robin".[12]

Like his father, Robert Walpole was a member of the Whig Party.[14] In 1705, Walpole was appointed by Queen Anne to be a member of the council for her husband, Prince George of Denmark, Lord High Admiral. After having been singled out in a struggle between the Whigs and the government, Walpole became the intermediary for reconciling the government to the Whig leaders. His abilities were recognised by Lord Godolphin (the Lord High Treasurer and leader of the Cabinet) and he was subsequently appointed to the position of Secretary at War in 1708; for a short period of time in 1710 he also simultaneously held the post of Treasurer of the Navy.[15]

Despite his personal clout, however, Walpole could not stop Lord Godolphin and the Whigs from pressing for the prosecution of Henry Sacheverell, a minister who preached anti-Whig sermons. The trial was extremely unpopular with much of the country, causing the Sacheverell riots, and was followed by the downfall of the Duke of Marlborough and the Whig Party in the general election of 1710. The new ministry, under the leadership of the Tory Robert Harley, removed Walpole from his office of Secretary at War but he remained Treasurer of the Navy until 2 January 1711. Harley had first attempted to entice him and then threatened him to join the Tories, but Walpole rejected the offers, instead becoming one of the most outspoken members of the Whig Opposition. He effectively defended Lord Godolphin against Tory attacks in parliamentary debate, as well as in the press.[16]

In 1712, Walpole was accused of venality and corruption in the matter of two forage contracts for Scotland. Although it was proven that he had retained none of the money, Walpole was pronounced "guilty of a high breach of trust and notorious corruption".[17] He was impeached by the House of Commons and found guilty by the House of Lords; he was then imprisoned in the Tower of London for six months and expelled from Parliament. While in the Tower he was regarded as a political martyr, and visited by all the Whig leaders. After he was released, Walpole wrote and published anonymous pamphlets attacking the Harley ministry and assisted Sir Richard Steele in crafting political pamphlets. Walpole was re-elected for King's Lynn in 1713.[17]

Stanhope–Sunderland ministry

Queen Anne died in 1714. Under the Act of Settlement 1701, which excluded Roman Catholics from the line of succession, Anne was succeeded by her second cousin, the Elector of Hanover, George I. George I distrusted the Tories, who he believed opposed his right to succeed to the Throne. The year of George's accession, 1714, marked the ascendancy of the Whigs who would remain in power for the next fifty years. Robert Walpole became a Privy Councillor and rose to the position of Paymaster of the Forces[18] in a Cabinet nominally led by Charles Montagu, 1st Earl of Halifax, but actually dominated by Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount Townshend (Walpole's brother-in-law) and James Stanhope (later 1st Earl Stanhope). Walpole was also appointed chairman of a secret committee formed to investigate the actions of the previous Tory ministry in 1715.[19] Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer was impeached, and Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke suffered from an act of attainder.[18]

Halifax, the titular head of the administration, died in 1715 and by 1716 Walpole was appointed to the posts of First Commissioner (Lord) of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer. He was a member of the Board of General Officers established in 1717 to investigate the abuse of pay. Walpole's fellow members, appointed by the Prince of Wales (later George II), included William Pulteney, 1st Earl of Bath, Secretary at War; General Lumley; General Erle; and Sir Philip Meadowes, Controller of the Army and Knight Marshal of the King's Palace,[20][21][b] whose daughter, Mary Meadows,[22][23] was maid-of-honour to Walpole's friend, Queen Caroline. A keen huntsman, Walpole built for himself Great Lodge (Old Lodge) in Richmond Park. Philip Medows, the deputy ranger of the park and son of Walpole's political ally, Sir Philip Meadowes, lived at Great Lodge after Walpole had vacated it.[24][25][20]

In his new political positions, and encouraged by his advisers, Walpole introduced the sinking fund, a device to reduce the national debt.[26] The Cabinet of which he was a member was often divided over most important issues. Normally, Walpole and Townshend were on one side, with Stanhope and Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland on the other. Foreign policy was the primary issue of contention; George I was thought to be conducting foreign affairs with the interests of his German territories, rather than those of Great Britain, at heart. The Stanhope–Sunderland faction, however, had the King's support. In 1716 Townshend had been removed from the important post of Northern Secretary and put in the lesser office of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.[27]

Even this change did not appease Stanhope and Sunderland, who secured the dismissal of Townshend from the Lord-Lieutenancy in April 1717.[27] On the next day, Walpole resigned from the Cabinet to join the Opposition "because I could not connive at some things that were carrying on",[28] and by joining the opposition he did not intend "to make the king uneasy or to embarrass his affairs."[29] This began the Whig Split, dividing the dominant party for three years. In the new Cabinet, Sunderland and Stanhope (who was created an Earl) were the effective heads.[citation needed] Walpole reversed his earlier support for the impeachment of Robert Harley, the former first minister, and joined with the Tory opposition in securing an acquittal in July 1717.[30]

Soon after Walpole's resignation, a bitter family quarrel between the King and the Prince of Wales, split the Royal Family. Walpole and others who opposed the Government often congregated at Leicester House, the home of the Prince of Wales, to form political plans.[31]

Walpole also became an adviser and close friend of the Prince of Wales's wife, Caroline.[32] In 1720 he improved his position by bringing about a reconciliation between the Prince of Wales and the King.[33]

Walpole continued to be an influential figure in the House of Commons.[34] He was especially active in opposing one of the Government's more significant proposals, the Peerage Bill, which would have limited the power of the monarch to create new peerages.[35] Walpole brought about a temporary abandonment of the bill in 1719[34] and the outright rejection of the bill by the House of Commons.[32] This defeat led Stanhope and Sunderland to reconcile with their opponents;[36] Walpole returned as Paymaster of the Forces[32] and Townshend was appointed Lord President of the Council. By accepting the position of Paymaster, however, Walpole lost the favour of the Prince of Wales (the future King George II), who still harboured disdain for his father's Government.[37]

Rise to power and decline

Soon after Walpole returned to the Cabinet, Britain was swept by a wave of over-enthusiastic speculation which led to the South Sea Bubble.[32] The Government had established a plan whereby the South Sea Company would assume the national debt of Great Britain in exchange for lucrative bonds. It was widely believed that the company would eventually reap an enormous profit through international trade in cloth, agricultural goods, and slaves.[38] Many in the country, including Walpole himself (who sold at the top of the market and made 1,000 per cent profit), frenziedly invested in the company. By the latter part of 1720, however, the company had begun to collapse as the price of its shares plunged.[32][39]

In 1721 a committee investigated[39] the scandal, finding that there was corruption on the part of many in the Cabinet. Among those implicated were John Aislabie[32] (the Chancellor of the Exchequer), James Craggs the Elder (the Postmaster General), James Craggs the Younger (the Southern Secretary), and even Lords Stanhope and Sunderland (the heads of the Ministry). Both Craggs the Elder and Craggs the Younger died in disgrace; the remainder were impeached for their corruption. Aislabie was found guilty and imprisoned, but the personal influence of Walpole saved both Stanhope and Sunderland. For his role in preventing these individuals and others from being punished, Walpole gained the nickname of "The Screen",[40][c] or "Screenmaster-General".[5]

The resignation of Sunderland and the death of Stanhope in 1721 left Walpole as the most important figure in the administration.[5] On 3 April 1721 he was appointed First Lord of the Treasury, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House of Commons.[5][41] Walpole's de facto tenure as "prime minister" is often dated to his appointment as First Lord of the Treasury in 1721,[32] though he himself rejected that title (it was originally a term of abuse), stating in 1741: "I unequivocally deny that I am sole and prime minister."[42] His brother-in-law Lord Townshend served as Secretary of State[43] for the Northern Department and controlled the nation's foreign affairs. The two also had to contend with the Secretary of State for the Southern Department, Lord Carteret.[44] Townshend and Walpole were thus restored to power and "annihilated the opposing faction".[32]

Premiership under George I

Under the guidance of Walpole, Parliament attempted to deal with the financial crisis brought on by the South Sea Bubble. The estates of the directors of the South Sea Company were used to relieve the suffering of the victims, and the stock of the company was divided between the Bank of England and East India Company.[32] The crisis had gravely damaged the credibility of the King and of the Whig Party, but Walpole defended both with skilful oratory in the House of Commons.[45]

Walpole's first year as prime minister was also marked by the discovery of a plot formed by Francis Atterbury, the bishop of Rochester.[46] The exposure of the scheme crushed the hopes of the Jacobites whose previous attempts at rebellion (most notably the risings of 1715 and 1719) had also failed. The Tory Party was equally unfortunate even though Lord Bolingbroke, a Tory leader who fled to France to avoid punishment for his Jacobite sympathies, was permitted to return to Britain in 1723.[47]

 
Speaker Arthur Onslow calling upon Sir Robert Walpole to Speak in the House of Commons by William Hogarth

During the remainder of George I's reign, Walpole's ascendancy continued; the political power of the monarch was gradually diminishing and that of his ministers gradually increasing.[48] In 1724 the primary political rival of Walpole and Townshend in the Cabinet, Lord Carteret, was dismissed from the post of Southern Secretary and once again appointed to the lesser office of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. In Ireland, Lord Carteret used his power to secretly aid in the controversy over Wood's Halfpence and support Drapier's Letters behind the scenes and cause harm to Walpole's power.[49][full citation needed][50][full citation needed] Walpole was able to recover from these events by removing the patent. However, Irish sentiment was situated against the English control.[51][page needed]

Townshend, working with the king, helped keep Great Britain at peace, especially by negotiating a treaty with France and Prussia in 1725. Walpole was not consulted and stated that Townshend was "too precipitate" in his actions.[52] Great Britain, free from Jacobite threats, from war, and from financial crises, grew prosperous, and Robert Walpole acquired the favour of George I.[48] In 1725 he persuaded the king to revive the Knighthood of the Bath and was himself invested with the order,[53][52] and in 1726 was made a Knight of the Garter,[54] earning him the nickname "Sir Bluestring".[52] His eldest son was granted a barony.[55]

Premiership under George II

Walpole's position was threatened in 1727 when George I died and was succeeded by George II. For a few days it seemed that Walpole would be dismissed but, on the advice of Queen Caroline, the King agreed to keep him in office. Although the King disliked Townshend, he retained him as well. Over the next years Walpole continued to share power with Townshend but the two clashed over British foreign affairs, especially over policy regarding Austria. Gradually Walpole became the clearly dominant partner in government. His colleague retired on 15 May 1730 and this date is sometimes given as the beginning of Walpole's unofficial tenure as prime minister. Townshend's departure enabled Walpole to conclude the Treaty of Vienna, creating the Anglo-Austrian alliance.[56]

Opposition

Walpole, a polarising figure, had many opponents, the most important of whom were in the Country Party, such as Lord Bolingbroke (who had been his political enemy since the days of Queen Anne)[57][full citation needed] and William Pulteney (a capable Whig statesman who felt snubbed when Walpole failed to include him in the Cabinet).[58] Bolingbroke and Pulteney ran a periodical called The Craftsman in which they incessantly denounced the Prime Minister's policies.[59] Walpole was also satirised and parodied extensively; he was often compared to the criminal Jonathan Wild as, for example, John Gay did in his farcical Beggar's Opera. Walpole's other enemies included Jonathan Swift,[60][page needed] Alexander Pope, Henry Fielding, and Samuel Johnson.[61]

Support

 
Walpole with his secretary, Henry Bilson-Legge, by Stephen Slaughter

Walpole secured the support of the people and of the House of Commons with a policy of avoiding war. He used his influence to prevent George II from entering the War of the Polish Succession in 1733, because it was a dispute between the Bourbons and the Habsburgs. He boasted, "There are 50,000 men slain in Europe this year, and not one Englishman."[62] By avoiding wars, Walpole could lower taxes. He reduced the national debt with a sinking fund, and by negotiating lower interest rates. He reduced the land tax from four shillings in 1721, to 3s in 1728, 2s in 1731 and finally to only 1s in 1732. His long-term goal was to replace the land tax, which was paid by the local gentry, with excise and customs taxes, which were paid by merchants and ultimately by consumers. Walpole joked that the landed gentry resembled hogs, which squealed loudly whenever anyone laid hands on him. By contrast, he said, merchants were like sheep, and yielded their wool without complaint.[63] The joke backfired in 1733 when he was defeated in a major battle to impose excise taxes on wine and tobacco. To reduce the threat of smuggling, the tax was to be collected not at ports but at warehouses. This new proposal, however, was extremely unpopular and aroused the opposition of the nation's merchants. Walpole agreed to withdraw the bill before Parliament voted on it, but he dismissed the politicians who had dared to oppose it in the first place. Thus, Walpole lost a considerable element of his Whig Party to the Opposition.[64](pp 28–33)

After the general elections of 1734, Walpole's supporters still formed a majority in the House of Commons although they were less numerous than before. He maintained both his parliamentary supremacy and his popularity in Norfolk, his home county. In May 1734, he presented a new silver mace "weighing 168 ounces, gilt, and finely exchased, to the city of Norwich – on the cup part of it are Sir Robert's arms, and the arms of the city; it was first carried before Mayor Philip Meadows Esq. on the 29th of May".[65][d][66] However, despite these great occasions, Walpole's broader popularity had begun to wane.[67] In 1736 an increase in the tax on gin inspired riots in London. The even more serious Porteous riots broke out in Edinburgh after the King pardoned a captain of the guard (John Porteous) who had commanded his troops to shoot a group of protesters. Though these events diminished Walpole's popularity,[67] they failed to shake his majority in Parliament. Walpole's domination over the House of Commons was highlighted by the ease with which he secured the rejection of Sir John Barnard's plan to reduce the interest on the national debt. Walpole was also able to persuade Parliament to pass the Licensing Act of 1737 under which London theatres were regulated.[68] The Act revealed a disdain for Swift, Pope, Fielding, and other literary figures who had attacked his government in their works.[69]

While the "country party" attacked Walpole relentlessly, he subsidised writers and lesser-known journalists such as William Arnall and Bishop Benjamin Hoadly as well as two men he named to the role of poet laureate, Laurence Eusden and Colley Cibber. They defended Walpole from the charge of evil political corruption by arguing that corruption is the universal human condition. Furthermore, they argued, political divisiveness was also universal and inevitable because of selfish passions that were integral to human nature. Arnall argued that government must be strong enough to control conflict, and in that regard, Walpole was quite successful. This style of "court" political rhetoric continued through the 18th century.[70]

Decline

 
1740 political cartoon depicting Walpole as the Colossus of Rhodes, alluding to his reluctance to engage Spain and France militarily
 
Satire on Nicholas Paxton, solicitor to the Treasury, and his refusal to answer questions from the Committee of Secrecy enquiring into the conduct of Robert Walpole.

The year 1737 saw the death of Walpole's close friend Queen Caroline. Though her death did not end his personal influence with George II, who had grown loyal to the Prime Minister during the preceding years, Walpole's domination of government continued to decline. His opponents acquired a vocal leader in the Prince of Wales who was estranged from his father, the King. Several young politicians including William Pitt the Elder and George Grenville formed a faction known as the "Patriot Boys" and joined the Prince of Wales in opposition.[71]

Walpole's failure to maintain a policy of avoiding military conflict eventually led to his fall from power.[72][page needed] Under the Treaty of Seville (1729), Great Britain agreed not to trade with the Spanish colonies in North America. Spain claimed the right to board and search British vessels to ensure compliance with this provision. Disputes, however, broke out over trade with the West Indies.[citation needed] Walpole attempted to prevent war but was opposed by the King, the House of Commons, and by a faction in his own Cabinet. In 1739 Walpole abandoned all efforts to stop the conflict and commenced the War of Jenkins' Ear (so called because Robert Jenkins, a Welsh mariner, claimed that a Spaniard inspecting his vessel had severed his ear).[citation needed]

Walpole's influence continued to dramatically decline even after the war began. In the 1741 general election his supporters secured an increase in votes in constituencies that were decided by mass electorates but failed to win in many pocket boroughs (constituencies subject to the informal but strong influence of patrons). In general, the government made gains in England and Wales but this was not enough to overturn the reverses of the 1734 election and further losses in Cornwall where many constituencies were obedient to the will of the Prince of Wales (who was also Duke of Cornwall). These constituencies returned members of parliament hostile to the Prime Minister. Similarly, the influence of the Duke of Argyll secured the election of members opposed to Walpole in some parts of Scotland. Walpole's new majority was difficult to determine because of the uncertain loyalties of many new members, but contemporaries and historians estimated it as low as fourteen to eighteen.[73]

In the new Parliament, many Whigs thought the ageing Prime Minister incapable of leading the military campaign. Moreover, his majority was not as strong as it had formerly been, his detractors – such as William Pulteney, earl of Bath, and Lord Perceval – being approximately as numerous as his supporters. Behind these political enemies were opposition Whigs, Tories and Jacobites. Walpole was alleged to have presided over an immense increase in corruption and to have enriched himself enormously whilst in office. Parliamentary committees were formed to investigate these charges.[74] In 1742 when the House of Commons was prepared to determine the validity of a by-election in Chippenham, Walpole and others agreed to treat the issue as a motion of no confidence. As Walpole was defeated on the vote, he agreed to resign from the Government. The news of the naval disaster against Spain in the Battle of Cartagena de Indias also prompted the end of his political career. King George II wept on his resignation and begged to see him frequently.[75] As part of his resignation the King agreed to elevate him to the House of Lords as the Earl of Orford, Viscount Walpole and Baron Walpole of Houghton in the County of Norfolk, this occurred on 6 February 1742. Five days later he formally relinquished the seals of office.[64](p 56)

Although no longer First Lord of the Treasury, Walpole remained politically involved as an advisor. His former colleagues were still pleased to see him, perhaps in part because he retained the king's favour. After his resignation, his main political roles were to support the government by means of advice, to dole out some patronage and to speak on the ministry's behalf in the Lords.[76]

Later life

 
Robert Walpole by Arthur Pond, 1742

Lord Orford was succeeded as prime minister by Lord Wilmington in an administration whose true head was Lord Carteret. A committee was created to inquire into Walpole's ministry but no substantial evidence of wrongdoing or corruption was discovered. Though no longer a member of the Cabinet, Orford continued to maintain personal influence with George II and was often dubbed the "Minister behind the Curtain" for this advice and influence. In 1744 he managed to secure the dismissal of Carteret and the appointment of Henry Pelham whom he regarded as a political protégé. He advised Pelham to make use of his seat in the Commons to serve as a bridge between the King and Parliament, just as Walpole had done.[77][78]

During this time, Walpole also made two interventions in the Lords. The first was in January 1744 in the debate on Hanoverian troops being kept in British pay. Walpole prevented them from losing the troops. In his second intervention, Walpole, with fear of a Jacobite-inspired invasion in February 1744, made a speech on the situation. Frederick, Prince of Wales, usually hostile to Walpole, warmly received him at his court the next day, most likely because his father's throne, and the future of the whole Hanoverian dynasty, was at risk from the Stuart Pretender.[79]

Along with his political interests in his last years, Walpole enjoyed the pleasures of the hunt. Back at his recently rebuilt country seat in Houghton, Norfolk, such pastimes were denied him due to "dismal weather".[80] He also enjoyed the beauties of the countryside. His art collection gave him particular pleasure. He had spent much money in the 1720s and 1730s in building up a collection of Old Masters from all over Europe. Walpole also concerned himself with estate matters.[79]

His health, never good, deteriorated rapidly toward the end of 1744. Walpole died in London on 18 March 1745 from a bladder stone, aged 68 years, and was buried at the Church of St Martin at Tours on the Haughton estate.[81] His earldom passed to his eldest son Robert who was in turn succeeded by his only son George. Upon the death of the third Earl, the earldom was inherited by the first Earl's younger son Horace Walpole, who is now remembered for his many thousands of insightful letters, published in 48 volumes by Yale University Press.[82] The title died with him in 1797.

Legacy

 
Walpole's reign, a contemporary political satire

Walpole exercised a tremendous influence on the politics of his day. The Tories became a minor insignificant faction, and the Whigs became a dominant and largely unopposed party. His influence on the development of the uncodified constitution of Great Britain was less momentous even though he is regarded as Great Britain's first prime minister.[75] He relied primarily on the favour of the King, rather than the support of the House of Commons. His power stemmed from his personal influence instead of the influence of his office. Most of his immediate successors were, comparatively speaking, extremely weak. It would take several decades more for the premiership to develop into the most powerful and most important office in the country.[citation needed]

Walpole's strategy of keeping Great Britain at peace contributed greatly to the country's prosperity. Walpole also managed to secure the position of the Hanoverian Dynasty, and effectively countervailed Jacobitism. The Jacobite threat ended, soon after Walpole's term ended, with the defeat of the rebellion of 1745. Later in the century, the Whig MP Edmund Burke "admitted him into the whig pantheon".[83] Burke wrote:

He was an honorable man and a sound Whig. He was not, as the Jacobites and discontented Whigs of his time have represented him, and as ill-informed people still represent him, a prodigal and corrupt minister. They charged him in their libels and seditious conversations as having first reduced corruption to a system. Such was their cant. But he was far from governing by corruption. He governed by party attachments. The charge of systematic corruption is less applicable to him, perhaps, than to any minister who ever served the crown for so great a length of time. He gained over very few from the Opposition. Without being a genius of the first class, he was an intelligent, prudent, and safe minister. He loved peace; and he helped to communicate the same disposition to nations at least as warlike and restless as that in which he had the chief direction of affairs. ... With many virtues, public and private, he had his faults; but his faults were superficial. A careless, coarse, and over familiar style of discourse, without sufficient regard to persons or occasions, and an almost total want of political decorum, were the errours [sic] by which he was most hurt in the public opinion: and those through which his enemies obtained the greatest advantage over him. But justice must be done. The prudence, steadiness, and vigilance of that man, joined to the greatest possible lenity in his character and his politics, preserved the crown to this royal family; and with it, their laws and liberties to this country.[84]

Lord Chesterfield expressed scepticism as to whether "an impartial Character of Sr Robert Walpole, will or can be transmitted to Posterity, for he governed this Kingdom so long that the various passions of Mankind mingled, and in a manner incorporated themselves, with every thing that was said or writt concerning him. Never was Man more flattered nor more abused, and his long power, was probably the chief cause of both".[85] Chesterfield claimed he was "much acquainted with him both in his publick and his private life":

In private life he was good natured, chearfull, social. Inelegant in his manners, loose in his morals. He had a coarse wit, which he was too free of for a man in his station, as it is always inconsistent with dignity. He was very able as a Minister, but without a certain elevation of mind ... He was both the ablest Parliament man, and the ablest manager of a Parliament, that I believe ever lived ... Money, not prerogative, was the chief engine of his administration, and he employed it with a success that in a manner disgraced humanity ... When he found any body proof, against pecuniary temptations, which alass! was but seldom, he had recourse to still a worse art. For he laughed at and ridiculed all notions of publick virtue, and the love of one's country, calling them the chimerical school boy flights of classical learning; declaring himself at the same time, no Saint, no Spartan, no reformer. He would frequently ask young fellows at their first appearance in the world, while their honest hearts were yet untainted, well are you to be an old Roman? a patriot? you will soon come off of that, and grow wiser. And thus he was more dangerous to the morals, than to the libertys of his country, to which I am persuaded that he meaned no ill in his heart. ... His name will not be recorded in history among the best men, or the best Ministers, but much much less ought it to be ranked among the worst.[86]

10 Downing Street represents another part of Walpole's legacy. George II offered this home to Walpole as a personal gift in 1732, but Walpole accepted it only as the official residence of the First Lord of the Treasury, taking up his residence there on 22 September 1735. His immediate successors did not always reside in Number 10 (preferring their larger private residences) but the home has nevertheless become established as the official residence of the prime minister (in his or her capacity as First Lord of the Treasury).[34]

Walpole has attracted attention from heterodox economists as a pioneer of protectionist policies, in the form of tariffs and subsidies to woollen manufacturers. As a result, the industry became Britain's primary export, enabling the country to import the raw materials and food that fueled the industrial revolution.[87]

Walpole is immortalised in St Stephen's Hall, where he and other notable Parliamentarians look on at visitors to Parliament.[88]

Walpole built Houghton Hall in Norfolk as his country seat.[citation needed] He also left behind a collection of art which he had assembled during his career. His grandson, the 3rd Earl of Orford, sold many of the works in this collection to the Russian Empress Catherine II in 1779. This collection – then regarded as one of the finest in Europe[89] – now lies in the State Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia. In 2013 the Hermitage loaned the collection to Houghton for display following the original William Kent hanging plan, recently discovered at Houghton.[90]

The nursery rhyme "Who Killed Cock Robin?" may allude to the fall of Walpole, who carried the popular nickname "Cock Robin".[91][page needed] (Contemporaries satirized the Walpole regime as the "Robinocracy" or as the "Robinarchy").[92]

Various locations are named after Walpole including: Walpole Street in Wolverhampton, England;[93] and the towns of Walpole, Massachusetts (founded in 1724), and Orford, New Hampshire (incorporated in 1761) in the United States.[34][93]

Marriages and issue

Catherine Shorter

 
Arms of Shorter, of Bybrook, Kent: Sable, a lion rampant or ducally crowned argent between three battle axes of the last headed of the second[94]

On 30 July 1700, Walpole married Catherine Shorter (1682-1737),[95] the eldest daughter[96] and co-heiress[97] of John Shorter of Bybrook in Ashford, Kent (the son of Sir John Shorter (1625–1688), Lord Mayor of London) by his wife Elizabeth Philipps (born c. 1664), a daughter of Sir Erasmus Philipps, 3rd Baronet.[95] She was described as "a woman of exquisite beauty and accomplished manners".[12] Her £20,000 dowry was, according to Walpole's brother Horatio Walpole, spent on the wedding, christenings and jewels.[98] Her sister and co-heiress Charlotte Shorter married (as his third wife) Francis Seymour-Conway, 1st Baron Conway (1679-1731/2), by whom she was the mother of Francis Seymour-Conway, 1st Marquess of Hertford (1718–1794). Sir John Shorter (c.1625-1688), Lord Mayor of London, married Isabel Birkhead, a sister of Edward Birkhead (d.1662) of Richmond House, Twickenham, Serjeant-at-Arms in the House of Commons in 1648, a Quaker Magistrate and the principal landowner in the parish of Twickenham.[99] Catherine's youngest son Horace later built Strawberry Hill House on land purchased by him at Twickenham. Catherine Shorter died on 20 August 1737 and was buried at Houghton,[95] with a monument in the south aisle of the King Henry VII Chapel, Westminster Abbey,[100] erected by her son Horatio, in the form of a life-size white marble statue, a copy by Filippo della Valle of a Roman statue of Livia (or Pudicitia) in the Villa Mattei in Rome.[e] On the plinth sculpted by John Michael Rysbrack is the following inscription written by Horace:[102]

To the memory of Catherine Lady Walpole, eldest daughter of John Shorter, Esqr. of Bybrook in Kent and first wife of Sir Robert Walpole, afterwards Earl of Orford, Horace her youngest son consecrates this monument. She had beauty and wit without vice or vanity, and cultivated the Arts without affectation. She was devout, tho' without bigotry to any sect, and was without prejudice to any party tho' the wife of a minister, whose power she esteemed but when she could employ it to benefit the miserable or to reward the meritorious. She loved a private life, tho' born to shine in public; and was an ornament to courts, untainted by them. She died Aug. 20 1737.

By Catherine Shorter he had two daughters and three sons:[100]

Maria Skerritt

 
Arms of Skerritt: Or, a chief indented sable[108]

Prior to the death of his first wife Walpole took on a mistress, Maria Skerittt (d.1738), a fashionable socialite of wit and beauty, with an independent fortune of £30,000,[109] the daughter and sole heiress of Thomas Skerittt (d.1738) (aliter Skerret, Skeritt, etc), a wealthy Irish merchant living in Dover Street, Mayfair, London.[110] They had been living together openly in Richmond Park and Houghton Hall since before 1728,[100] and married at some time before March 1738. She died on 4 June 1739 following a miscarriage. Walpole considered her "indispensable to his happiness", and her loss plunged him into a "deplorable and comfortless condition", which led to a severe illness.[111] By Maria Skerritt he had one daughter, born before the marriage, but subsequently legitimated:[f]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As a young man, Sir Robert bought shares of the South Seas Co., which monopolized trade with Spain, the Caribbean and South America. The speculative market for slaves, rum and mahogany spawned a frenzy that had ramifications throughout Europe when it collapsed. "But Walpole bought at the bottom and sold at the top," Tinterow said. That fortune enabled him to build Houghton.[13]
  2. ^ Sir Philip Meadows Jnr. (d. 1757) – the son of Sir Philip Meadows Snr. (d. 1718) – was a commissioner of excise from 1698 to 1700, was on 2 July 1700 appointed knight-marshal of the king's household, and formally knighted by William III on 23 Dec. 1700 at Hampton Court. ...[21]
  3. ^ "After all the pains that have been taken to detect the villanys of the directors and their friends, I am afraid they will at last flip thro’ their fingers, and that nothing further will be done as to confiscation, hanging, &c. There certainly is a majority in the house of commons, that are willing to do themselves and the kingdom justice; but they act so little in concert together [...] He [ Thomas Brodrick ] is [...] the spring that gives motion to the whole body; and the only man that either can or will set matters in a true light, and expose and baffle the schemes of the skreen, &c. The house were five hours in a committee [...] and were amuse’d and banter’d [...] by questions and amendments propos’d by the skreen, &c. so that they rose at last without coming to any resolution. [...] the kingdom is like to be very happy, when the skreen, and the gentleman [Sunderland] with the bloody nose, act in perfect concert together."[40]
  4. ^ In 1734, a new silver mace, weighing 168 ounces, gilt and finely exchased, was presented to the city by the right honourable Sir Rob. Walpole; on the cup part of it are Sir Robert's arms, and the arms of the city; it was first carried before the Mayor on the 29th of May.[65]
  5. ^ "In five of the niches, on pedestals, are, I. A cart in plaifter bronzed of Catharine Lady Walpole, the model of her statue in Westminster Abbey, executed at Rome by Valory, and taken from the Livia or Pudicitia in the Villa Mattei" (now called Villa Celimontana)[101]
  6. ^ No issue is given in Burke's Extinct Peerage to this second marriage of Sir Robert Walpole; but in Ancient Peerages is this:
    "Sir Robert Walpole married, in 1737, Maria, daughter and sole heir of Thomas Skerret, who died in 1738; he had a daughter from her before marriage, Maria, his Majesty's housekeeper at Windsor, and wife of Charles Churchill. She was legitimated, and given the rank of an Earl's daughter."[full citation needed]

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Sources

  • "Walpole, Robert (WLPL695R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  • Aotes, Jonathan (April 2006). "Sir Robert Walpole after his fall from power, 1742–1745". History. 91 (302): 218–230. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229x.2006.00364.x.
  • Browning, Reed (1975). The Duke of Newcastle. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-01746-5.
  • Franklin, Colin (1993). Lord Chesterfield. His character and 'characters'. Aldershot: Scolar Press. p. 114.
  • Hoppit, Julian (2000). A Land of Liberty? England 1689–1727.
  • Langford, Paul (1998). A Polite and Commercial People: England, 1727–1783. Oxford University Press. pp. 9–58. Robin's Reign [on cover]
  • Leadam, Isaac Saunders (1899). Sir Robert Walpole – a short biography – via Amazon.com.
  • Leadam, Isaac Saunders (1899), "Walpole, Robert (1676–1745)" , in Lee, Sidney (ed.), Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 59, London: Smith, Elder & Co, pp. 178–207
  • O'Gorman, Frank (1997). The Long Eighteenth Century: British political and social history 1688–1832.
  • Speck, W.A. (1977). Stability and Strife: England 1714–1760.
  • Taylor, Stephen (January 2008) [2004], "Walpole, Robert, first earl of Orford (1676–1745)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/28601 (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Handley, Stuart; Rowe, M.J.; McBryde, W.H. (October 2007), "Pulteney, William, earl of Bath (1684–1764)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22889 (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Further reading

  • Black, Jeremy (2001). Walpole in Power. Stroud: Sutton Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7509-2523-5.
  • Blick, Andrew, and George Jones. At Power's Elbow: Aides to the Prime Minister from Robert Walpole to David Cameron (Biteback Publishing, 2013)
  • Courtney, William Prideaux (1911). "Orford, Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (11th ed.). pp. 254–256.
  • Dickinson, Harry T. (1972) "Walpole and his critics," History Today (3 June 1972), Vol. 22 Issue 6, pp 410–419 online.
  • Dickinson, Harry T. (1973). Walpole and the Whig Supremacy. London: English Universities Press. ISBN 978-0-340-11515-2.
  • Field, Ophelia (2008). The Kit-Cat Club: Friends who imagined a nation. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-717892-6.
  • Hartop, Christopher (2014), Sir Robert Walpole's Silver, London: Silver Society, ISBN 978-0-9549144-3-1
  • Hill, Brian W. (1989). Sir Robert Walpole: Sole and Prime Minister. London: Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 978-0-241-12738-4.
  • Holmes, Geoffrey, and Daniel Szechi. The age of oligarchy: pre-industrial Britain 1722-1783 (1993) excerpt; "The Age of Walpole" pp. 3–88
  • Marshall, Dorothy. Eighteenth Century England, 1714–1784 (2nd ed. 1974), pp. 101–191, political narrative
  • Murdoch, Tessa (ed.). Noble Households: Eighteenth-Century Inventories of Great English Houses (Cambridge, John Adamson, 2006) ISBN 978-0-9524322-5-8 OCLC 78044620. For an inventory of Houghton Hall two months after Walpole's death in 1745, see pp. 170–84.
  • Pearce, Edward (2008). The Great Man: Sir Robert Walpole. London: Pimlico. ISBN 978-1-84413-405-2.
  • Plumb, J. H. "Sir Robert Walpole" History Today (Oct 1951) 1#10 pp. 9–16
  • Plumb, J. H. (1956–1960). Sir Robert Walpole. London: Cresset Press.; the standard scholarly biography; vol. 1: Sir Robert Walpole: The Making of a Statesman (1956) to 1722; vol 2: Sir Robert Walpole, The King's Minister (1960) ends in 1734; vol 3 was never finished; 1972 reprint combined vol 1 and vol 2 as Sir Robert Walpole ISBN 0678035504
  • Plumb, J. H. (1967). The Growth of Political Stability in England 1675–1725. London: Macmillan and Co.
  • Rodger, N.A.M. (2006). Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain 1649–1815. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-102690-9.
  • Williams, Basil. The Whig Supremacy 1714–1760 (1939; 2nd ed. 1962) online edition; pp 180–212; covers his ministry 1721–42
  • Williams, Basil. "The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole" English Historical Review 15#58 (Apr. 1900), pp. 251–276 in JSTOR
    • "The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole (Continued)" English Historical Review 15#59 (July 1900), pp. 479–494 in JSTOR
    • "The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole (Continued)" English Historical Review 59#60 (Oct. 1900), pp. 665–698 in JSTOR
    • "The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole" English Historical Review 16#61 (Jan. 1901), pp. 67–83 in JSTOR
    • "The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole (Continued)" English Historical Review 16#62 (Apr. 1901), pp. 308–327 in JSTOR
    • "The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole (Continued)" English Historical Review 16#53 (July 1901), pp. 439–451 in JSTOR

Primary sources

  • Coxe, William. Memoirs of the Life and Administration of Sir Robert Walpole, Earl of Orford (3 vol 1800) online

External links

  • Robert Walpole's biography on the UK history of government blog
  • Houghton Hall
  • Cholmondeley Castle
  • Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford at the National Portrait Gallery, London
  • Ancestors of Robert Walpole
Parliament of England
Preceded by
Robert Walpole
Thomas Howard
Member of Parliament for Castle Rising
1701–1702
With: Thomas Howard 1701
Robert Cecil 1701
The Earl of Ranelagh 1701–1702
Marquess of Hartington 1702
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Sir John Turner
Sir Charles Turner
Member of Parliament for King's Lynn
1702–1712
Served alongside: Sir Charles Turner
Succeeded by
Sir Charles Turner
Sir John Turner
Preceded by
Sir Charles Turner
Sir John Turner
Member of Parliament for King's Lynn
1713–1742
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Secretary at War
1708–1710
Succeeded by
Preceded by Treasurer of the Navy
1710–1711
Succeeded by
Preceded by Paymaster of the Forces
1714–1715
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Lord of the Treasury
1715–1717
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1715–1717
Preceded by Paymaster of the Forces
1720–1721
Succeeded by
First
None recognised before
Prime Minister of Great Britain
1721–1742
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Lord of the Treasury
1721–1742
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1721–1742
Succeeded by
Unknown Leader of the House of Commons
1721–1742
Peerage of Great Britain
New creation Earl of Orford
1742–1745
Succeeded by

robert, walpole, other, people, named, disambiguation, earl, orford, august, 1676, march, 1745, known, between, 1725, 1742, british, statesman, whig, politician, first, lord, treasury, chancellor, exchequer, leader, house, commons, generally, regarded, facto, . For other people named Robert Walpole see Robert Walpole disambiguation Robert Walpole 1st Earl of Orford KG PC 26 August 1676 18 March 1745 known between 1725 and 1742 as Sir Robert Walpole was a British statesman and Whig politician who as First Lord of the Treasury Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House of Commons is generally regarded as the de facto first Prime Minister of Great Britain The Right HonourableThe Earl of OrfordKG PCPortrait by Jean Baptiste van Loo c 1740Prime Minister of Great BritainIn office 3 April 1721 11 February 1742MonarchsGeorge I George IIPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byThe Earl of WilmingtonFirst Lord of the TreasuryIn office 4 April 1721 11 February 1742Preceded byCharles SpencerSucceeded byThe Earl of WilmingtonIn office 10 October 1715 12 April 1717Preceded byThe Earl of CarlisleSucceeded byThe Earl StanhopeChancellor of the ExchequerIn office 3 April 1721 12 February 1742Preceded bySir John PrattSucceeded bySamuel SandysIn office 12 October 1715 15 April 1717Preceded bySir Richard OnslowSucceeded byThe Earl StanhopeFurther ministerial officesPaymaster of the ForcesIn office 11 June 1720 19 April 1721Preceded byThe Earl of LincolnSucceeded byThe Lord CornwallisIn office 3 October 1714 17 October 1715Preceded byJohn Grubham Howe Thomas MooreSucceeded byThe Earl of LincolnTreasurer of the NavyIn office 21 January 1710 2 January 1711Preceded bySir Thomas LittletonSucceeded byCharles CaesarSecretary at WarIn office 25 February 1708 8 August 1710Preceded byHenry St JohnSucceeded byGeorge GranvilleParliamentary officesLeader of the House of CommonsIn office 3 April 1721 6 February 1742Succeeded bySamuel SandysMember of Parliamentfor King s LynnIn office 1713 6 February 1742Preceded byJohn TurnerSucceeded byEdward BaconIn office 11 February 1712 6 March 1712Preceded byVacantSucceeded byJohn TurnerIn office 1702 17 January 1712Preceded bySir John TurnerSucceeded byVacantMember of Parliamentfor Castle RisingIn office February 1701 1702Preceded byRobert WalpoleSucceeded byHoratio WalpolePersonal detailsBorn 1676 08 26 26 August 1676Houghton Norfolk EnglandDied18 March 1745 1745 03 18 aged 68 London EnglandResting placeSt Martin at Tours Church HoughtonPolitical partyWhigSpousesCatherine Shorter m 1700 died 1737 wbr Maria Skerret m 1738 died 1738 wbr Children6 including Robert Edward and HoraceParentCol Robert Walpole father RelativesWalpole familyEducationEton CollegeAlma materKing s College CambridgeOccupationBusinessmanpoliticianscholarSignatureAlthough the exact dates of Walpole s dominance dubbed the Robinocracy 1 are a matter of scholarly debate the period 1721 1742 is often used He dominated the Walpole Townshend ministry as well as the subsequent Walpole ministry and holds the record as the longest serving British prime minister W A Speck wrote that Walpole s uninterrupted run of 20 years as prime minister is rightly regarded as one of the major feats of British political history Explanations are usually offered in terms of his expert handling of the political system after 1720 and his unique blending of the surviving powers of the crown with the increasing influence of the Commons 2 Walpole was a Whig from the gentry class who was first elected to Parliament in 1701 and held many senior positions He was a country squire and looked to country gentlemen for his political base Historian F O Gorman says his leadership in Parliament reflected his reasonable and persuasive oratory his ability to move both the emotions as well as the minds of men and above all his extraordinary self confidence 3 Hoppit says Walpole s policies sought moderation he worked for peace lower taxes and growing exports and allowed a little more tolerance for Protestant Dissenters He mostly avoided controversy and high intensity disputes as his middle way attracted moderates from both the Whig and Tory camps but his appointment to Chancellor of the Exchequer after the South Sea Bubble stock market crisis drew attention to perceived protection of political allies by Walpole 4 5 H T Dickinson sums up his historical role by saying that Walpole was one of the greatest politicians in British history He played a significant role in sustaining the Whig party safeguarding the Hanoverian succession and defending the principles of the Glorious Revolution 1688 He established stable political supremacy for the Whig party and taught succeeding ministers how best to establish an effective working relationship between Crown and Parliament 6 Some scholars rank him highly among British prime ministers 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 2 1 Business success 2 2 Political career 2 3 Stanhope Sunderland ministry 3 Rise to power and decline 3 1 Premiership under George I 3 2 Premiership under George II 3 2 1 Opposition 3 2 2 Support 3 3 Decline 4 Later life 5 Legacy 6 Marriages and issue 6 1 Catherine Shorter 6 2 Maria Skerritt 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 11 1 Primary sources 12 External linksEarly life EditWalpole was born in Houghton Norfolk in 1676 One of 19 children he was the third son and fifth child of Robert Walpole a member of the local gentry and a Whig politician who represented the borough of Castle Rising in the House of Commons and his wife Mary Burwell the daughter and heiress of Sir Geoffrey Burwell of Rougham Suffolk Horatio Walpole 1st Baron Walpole was his younger brother 8 As a child Walpole attended a private school at Massingham Norfolk 9 Walpole entered Eton College in 1690 10 where he was a King s Scholar 11 He left Eton on 2 April 1696 9 and matriculated at King s College Cambridge on the same day 10 On 25 May 1698 he left Cambridge after the death of his only remaining older brother Edward so that he could help his father administer the family estate to which he had become the heir Walpole had planned to become a clergyman but as he was now the eldest surviving son in the family he abandoned the idea In November 1700 his father died and Robert succeeded to inherit the Walpole estate A paper in his father s handwriting dated 9 June 1700 shows the family estate in Norfolk and Suffolk to have been nine manors in Norfolk and one in Suffolk 12 Early career EditBusiness success Edit As a young man Walpole had bought shares in the South Sea Company which monopolised trade with Spain the Caribbean and South America The speculative market for slaves rum and mahogany spawned a frenzy that had ramifications throughout Europe when it collapsed However Walpole had bought at the bottom and sold at the top adding greatly to his inherited wealth and allowing him to create Houghton Hall as seen today 13 a Political career Edit Walpole s political career began in January 1701 when he won a seat in the English general election at Castle Rising in Norfolk He left Castle Rising in 1702 so that he could represent the neighbouring borough of King s Lynn a pocket borough that would re elect him for the remainder of his political career Voters and politicians nicknamed him Robin 12 Like his father Robert Walpole was a member of the Whig Party 14 In 1705 Walpole was appointed by Queen Anne to be a member of the council for her husband Prince George of Denmark Lord High Admiral After having been singled out in a struggle between the Whigs and the government Walpole became the intermediary for reconciling the government to the Whig leaders His abilities were recognised by Lord Godolphin the Lord High Treasurer and leader of the Cabinet and he was subsequently appointed to the position of Secretary at War in 1708 for a short period of time in 1710 he also simultaneously held the post of Treasurer of the Navy 15 Despite his personal clout however Walpole could not stop Lord Godolphin and the Whigs from pressing for the prosecution of Henry Sacheverell a minister who preached anti Whig sermons The trial was extremely unpopular with much of the country causing the Sacheverell riots and was followed by the downfall of the Duke of Marlborough and the Whig Party in the general election of 1710 The new ministry under the leadership of the Tory Robert Harley removed Walpole from his office of Secretary at War but he remained Treasurer of the Navy until 2 January 1711 Harley had first attempted to entice him and then threatened him to join the Tories but Walpole rejected the offers instead becoming one of the most outspoken members of the Whig Opposition He effectively defended Lord Godolphin against Tory attacks in parliamentary debate as well as in the press 16 In 1712 Walpole was accused of venality and corruption in the matter of two forage contracts for Scotland Although it was proven that he had retained none of the money Walpole was pronounced guilty of a high breach of trust and notorious corruption 17 He was impeached by the House of Commons and found guilty by the House of Lords he was then imprisoned in the Tower of London for six months and expelled from Parliament While in the Tower he was regarded as a political martyr and visited by all the Whig leaders After he was released Walpole wrote and published anonymous pamphlets attacking the Harley ministry and assisted Sir Richard Steele in crafting political pamphlets Walpole was re elected for King s Lynn in 1713 17 Stanhope Sunderland ministry Edit Main articles First Stanhope Sunderland ministry and Second Stanhope Sunderland ministry Queen Anne died in 1714 Under the Act of Settlement 1701 which excluded Roman Catholics from the line of succession Anne was succeeded by her second cousin the Elector of Hanover George I George I distrusted the Tories who he believed opposed his right to succeed to the Throne The year of George s accession 1714 marked the ascendancy of the Whigs who would remain in power for the next fifty years Robert Walpole became a Privy Councillor and rose to the position of Paymaster of the Forces 18 in a Cabinet nominally led by Charles Montagu 1st Earl of Halifax but actually dominated by Charles Townshend 2nd Viscount Townshend Walpole s brother in law and James Stanhope later 1st Earl Stanhope Walpole was also appointed chairman of a secret committee formed to investigate the actions of the previous Tory ministry in 1715 19 Robert Harley 1st Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer was impeached and Henry St John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke suffered from an act of attainder 18 Halifax the titular head of the administration died in 1715 and by 1716 Walpole was appointed to the posts of First Commissioner Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer He was a member of the Board of General Officers established in 1717 to investigate the abuse of pay Walpole s fellow members appointed by the Prince of Wales later George II included William Pulteney 1st Earl of Bath Secretary at War General Lumley General Erle and Sir Philip Meadowes Controller of the Army and Knight Marshal of the King s Palace 20 21 b whose daughter Mary Meadows 22 23 was maid of honour to Walpole s friend Queen Caroline A keen huntsman Walpole built for himself Great Lodge Old Lodge in Richmond Park Philip Medows the deputy ranger of the park and son of Walpole s political ally Sir Philip Meadowes lived at Great Lodge after Walpole had vacated it 24 25 20 In his new political positions and encouraged by his advisers Walpole introduced the sinking fund a device to reduce the national debt 26 The Cabinet of which he was a member was often divided over most important issues Normally Walpole and Townshend were on one side with Stanhope and Charles Spencer 3rd Earl of Sunderland on the other Foreign policy was the primary issue of contention George I was thought to be conducting foreign affairs with the interests of his German territories rather than those of Great Britain at heart The Stanhope Sunderland faction however had the King s support In 1716 Townshend had been removed from the important post of Northern Secretary and put in the lesser office of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 27 Even this change did not appease Stanhope and Sunderland who secured the dismissal of Townshend from the Lord Lieutenancy in April 1717 27 On the next day Walpole resigned from the Cabinet to join the Opposition because I could not connive at some things that were carrying on 28 and by joining the opposition he did not intend to make the king uneasy or to embarrass his affairs 29 This began the Whig Split dividing the dominant party for three years In the new Cabinet Sunderland and Stanhope who was created an Earl were the effective heads citation needed Walpole reversed his earlier support for the impeachment of Robert Harley the former first minister and joined with the Tory opposition in securing an acquittal in July 1717 30 Soon after Walpole s resignation a bitter family quarrel between the King and the Prince of Wales split the Royal Family Walpole and others who opposed the Government often congregated at Leicester House the home of the Prince of Wales to form political plans 31 Walpole also became an adviser and close friend of the Prince of Wales s wife Caroline 32 In 1720 he improved his position by bringing about a reconciliation between the Prince of Wales and the King 33 Walpole continued to be an influential figure in the House of Commons 34 He was especially active in opposing one of the Government s more significant proposals the Peerage Bill which would have limited the power of the monarch to create new peerages 35 Walpole brought about a temporary abandonment of the bill in 1719 34 and the outright rejection of the bill by the House of Commons 32 This defeat led Stanhope and Sunderland to reconcile with their opponents 36 Walpole returned as Paymaster of the Forces 32 and Townshend was appointed Lord President of the Council By accepting the position of Paymaster however Walpole lost the favour of the Prince of Wales the future King George II who still harboured disdain for his father s Government 37 Rise to power and decline EditSoon after Walpole returned to the Cabinet Britain was swept by a wave of over enthusiastic speculation which led to the South Sea Bubble 32 The Government had established a plan whereby the South Sea Company would assume the national debt of Great Britain in exchange for lucrative bonds It was widely believed that the company would eventually reap an enormous profit through international trade in cloth agricultural goods and slaves 38 Many in the country including Walpole himself who sold at the top of the market and made 1 000 per cent profit frenziedly invested in the company By the latter part of 1720 however the company had begun to collapse as the price of its shares plunged 32 39 In 1721 a committee investigated 39 the scandal finding that there was corruption on the part of many in the Cabinet Among those implicated were John Aislabie 32 the Chancellor of the Exchequer James Craggs the Elder the Postmaster General James Craggs the Younger the Southern Secretary and even Lords Stanhope and Sunderland the heads of the Ministry Both Craggs the Elder and Craggs the Younger died in disgrace the remainder were impeached for their corruption Aislabie was found guilty and imprisoned but the personal influence of Walpole saved both Stanhope and Sunderland For his role in preventing these individuals and others from being punished Walpole gained the nickname of The Screen 40 c or Screenmaster General 5 The resignation of Sunderland and the death of Stanhope in 1721 left Walpole as the most important figure in the administration 5 On 3 April 1721 he was appointed First Lord of the Treasury Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House of Commons 5 41 Walpole s de facto tenure as prime minister is often dated to his appointment as First Lord of the Treasury in 1721 32 though he himself rejected that title it was originally a term of abuse stating in 1741 I unequivocally deny that I am sole and prime minister 42 His brother in law Lord Townshend served as Secretary of State 43 for the Northern Department and controlled the nation s foreign affairs The two also had to contend with the Secretary of State for the Southern Department Lord Carteret 44 Townshend and Walpole were thus restored to power and annihilated the opposing faction 32 Premiership under George I Edit Further information Walpole Townshend ministry Under the guidance of Walpole Parliament attempted to deal with the financial crisis brought on by the South Sea Bubble The estates of the directors of the South Sea Company were used to relieve the suffering of the victims and the stock of the company was divided between the Bank of England and East India Company 32 The crisis had gravely damaged the credibility of the King and of the Whig Party but Walpole defended both with skilful oratory in the House of Commons 45 Walpole s first year as prime minister was also marked by the discovery of a plot formed by Francis Atterbury the bishop of Rochester 46 The exposure of the scheme crushed the hopes of the Jacobites whose previous attempts at rebellion most notably the risings of 1715 and 1719 had also failed The Tory Party was equally unfortunate even though Lord Bolingbroke a Tory leader who fled to France to avoid punishment for his Jacobite sympathies was permitted to return to Britain in 1723 47 Speaker Arthur Onslow calling upon Sir Robert Walpole to Speak in the House of Commons by William Hogarth During the remainder of George I s reign Walpole s ascendancy continued the political power of the monarch was gradually diminishing and that of his ministers gradually increasing 48 In 1724 the primary political rival of Walpole and Townshend in the Cabinet Lord Carteret was dismissed from the post of Southern Secretary and once again appointed to the lesser office of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland In Ireland Lord Carteret used his power to secretly aid in the controversy over Wood s Halfpence and support Drapier s Letters behind the scenes and cause harm to Walpole s power 49 full citation needed 50 full citation needed Walpole was able to recover from these events by removing the patent However Irish sentiment was situated against the English control 51 page needed Townshend working with the king helped keep Great Britain at peace especially by negotiating a treaty with France and Prussia in 1725 Walpole was not consulted and stated that Townshend was too precipitate in his actions 52 Great Britain free from Jacobite threats from war and from financial crises grew prosperous and Robert Walpole acquired the favour of George I 48 In 1725 he persuaded the king to revive the Knighthood of the Bath and was himself invested with the order 53 52 and in 1726 was made a Knight of the Garter 54 earning him the nickname Sir Bluestring 52 His eldest son was granted a barony 55 Premiership under George II Edit Further information Walpole ministry Walpole s position was threatened in 1727 when George I died and was succeeded by George II For a few days it seemed that Walpole would be dismissed but on the advice of Queen Caroline the King agreed to keep him in office Although the King disliked Townshend he retained him as well Over the next years Walpole continued to share power with Townshend but the two clashed over British foreign affairs especially over policy regarding Austria Gradually Walpole became the clearly dominant partner in government His colleague retired on 15 May 1730 and this date is sometimes given as the beginning of Walpole s unofficial tenure as prime minister Townshend s departure enabled Walpole to conclude the Treaty of Vienna creating the Anglo Austrian alliance 56 Opposition Edit Walpole a polarising figure had many opponents the most important of whom were in the Country Party such as Lord Bolingbroke who had been his political enemy since the days of Queen Anne 57 full citation needed and William Pulteney a capable Whig statesman who felt snubbed when Walpole failed to include him in the Cabinet 58 Bolingbroke and Pulteney ran a periodical called The Craftsman in which they incessantly denounced the Prime Minister s policies 59 Walpole was also satirised and parodied extensively he was often compared to the criminal Jonathan Wild as for example John Gay did in his farcical Beggar s Opera Walpole s other enemies included Jonathan Swift 60 page needed Alexander Pope Henry Fielding and Samuel Johnson 61 Support Edit Walpole with his secretary Henry Bilson Legge by Stephen Slaughter Walpole secured the support of the people and of the House of Commons with a policy of avoiding war He used his influence to prevent George II from entering the War of the Polish Succession in 1733 because it was a dispute between the Bourbons and the Habsburgs He boasted There are 50 000 men slain in Europe this year and not one Englishman 62 By avoiding wars Walpole could lower taxes He reduced the national debt with a sinking fund and by negotiating lower interest rates He reduced the land tax from four shillings in 1721 to 3s in 1728 2s in 1731 and finally to only 1s in 1732 His long term goal was to replace the land tax which was paid by the local gentry with excise and customs taxes which were paid by merchants and ultimately by consumers Walpole joked that the landed gentry resembled hogs which squealed loudly whenever anyone laid hands on him By contrast he said merchants were like sheep and yielded their wool without complaint 63 The joke backfired in 1733 when he was defeated in a major battle to impose excise taxes on wine and tobacco To reduce the threat of smuggling the tax was to be collected not at ports but at warehouses This new proposal however was extremely unpopular and aroused the opposition of the nation s merchants Walpole agreed to withdraw the bill before Parliament voted on it but he dismissed the politicians who had dared to oppose it in the first place Thus Walpole lost a considerable element of his Whig Party to the Opposition 64 pp 28 33 After the general elections of 1734 Walpole s supporters still formed a majority in the House of Commons although they were less numerous than before He maintained both his parliamentary supremacy and his popularity in Norfolk his home county In May 1734 he presented a new silver mace weighing 168 ounces gilt and finely exchased to the city of Norwich on the cup part of it are Sir Robert s arms and the arms of the city it was first carried before Mayor Philip Meadows Esq on the 29th of May 65 d 66 However despite these great occasions Walpole s broader popularity had begun to wane 67 In 1736 an increase in the tax on gin inspired riots in London The even more serious Porteous riots broke out in Edinburgh after the King pardoned a captain of the guard John Porteous who had commanded his troops to shoot a group of protesters Though these events diminished Walpole s popularity 67 they failed to shake his majority in Parliament Walpole s domination over the House of Commons was highlighted by the ease with which he secured the rejection of Sir John Barnard s plan to reduce the interest on the national debt Walpole was also able to persuade Parliament to pass the Licensing Act of 1737 under which London theatres were regulated 68 The Act revealed a disdain for Swift Pope Fielding and other literary figures who had attacked his government in their works 69 While the country party attacked Walpole relentlessly he subsidised writers and lesser known journalists such as William Arnall and Bishop Benjamin Hoadly as well as two men he named to the role of poet laureate Laurence Eusden and Colley Cibber They defended Walpole from the charge of evil political corruption by arguing that corruption is the universal human condition Furthermore they argued political divisiveness was also universal and inevitable because of selfish passions that were integral to human nature Arnall argued that government must be strong enough to control conflict and in that regard Walpole was quite successful This style of court political rhetoric continued through the 18th century 70 Decline Edit 1740 political cartoon depicting Walpole as the Colossus of Rhodes alluding to his reluctance to engage Spain and France militarily Satire on Nicholas Paxton solicitor to the Treasury and his refusal to answer questions from the Committee of Secrecy enquiring into the conduct of Robert Walpole The year 1737 saw the death of Walpole s close friend Queen Caroline Though her death did not end his personal influence with George II who had grown loyal to the Prime Minister during the preceding years Walpole s domination of government continued to decline His opponents acquired a vocal leader in the Prince of Wales who was estranged from his father the King Several young politicians including William Pitt the Elder and George Grenville formed a faction known as the Patriot Boys and joined the Prince of Wales in opposition 71 Walpole s failure to maintain a policy of avoiding military conflict eventually led to his fall from power 72 page needed Under the Treaty of Seville 1729 Great Britain agreed not to trade with the Spanish colonies in North America Spain claimed the right to board and search British vessels to ensure compliance with this provision Disputes however broke out over trade with the West Indies citation needed Walpole attempted to prevent war but was opposed by the King the House of Commons and by a faction in his own Cabinet In 1739 Walpole abandoned all efforts to stop the conflict and commenced the War of Jenkins Ear so called because Robert Jenkins a Welsh mariner claimed that a Spaniard inspecting his vessel had severed his ear citation needed Walpole s influence continued to dramatically decline even after the war began In the 1741 general election his supporters secured an increase in votes in constituencies that were decided by mass electorates but failed to win in many pocket boroughs constituencies subject to the informal but strong influence of patrons In general the government made gains in England and Wales but this was not enough to overturn the reverses of the 1734 election and further losses in Cornwall where many constituencies were obedient to the will of the Prince of Wales who was also Duke of Cornwall These constituencies returned members of parliament hostile to the Prime Minister Similarly the influence of the Duke of Argyll secured the election of members opposed to Walpole in some parts of Scotland Walpole s new majority was difficult to determine because of the uncertain loyalties of many new members but contemporaries and historians estimated it as low as fourteen to eighteen 73 In the new Parliament many Whigs thought the ageing Prime Minister incapable of leading the military campaign Moreover his majority was not as strong as it had formerly been his detractors such as William Pulteney earl of Bath and Lord Perceval being approximately as numerous as his supporters Behind these political enemies were opposition Whigs Tories and Jacobites Walpole was alleged to have presided over an immense increase in corruption and to have enriched himself enormously whilst in office Parliamentary committees were formed to investigate these charges 74 In 1742 when the House of Commons was prepared to determine the validity of a by election in Chippenham Walpole and others agreed to treat the issue as a motion of no confidence As Walpole was defeated on the vote he agreed to resign from the Government The news of the naval disaster against Spain in the Battle of Cartagena de Indias also prompted the end of his political career King George II wept on his resignation and begged to see him frequently 75 As part of his resignation the King agreed to elevate him to the House of Lords as the Earl of Orford Viscount Walpole and Baron Walpole of Houghton in the County of Norfolk this occurred on 6 February 1742 Five days later he formally relinquished the seals of office 64 p 56 Although no longer First Lord of the Treasury Walpole remained politically involved as an advisor His former colleagues were still pleased to see him perhaps in part because he retained the king s favour After his resignation his main political roles were to support the government by means of advice to dole out some patronage and to speak on the ministry s behalf in the Lords 76 Later life Edit Robert Walpole by Arthur Pond 1742 Lord Orford was succeeded as prime minister by Lord Wilmington in an administration whose true head was Lord Carteret A committee was created to inquire into Walpole s ministry but no substantial evidence of wrongdoing or corruption was discovered Though no longer a member of the Cabinet Orford continued to maintain personal influence with George II and was often dubbed the Minister behind the Curtain for this advice and influence In 1744 he managed to secure the dismissal of Carteret and the appointment of Henry Pelham whom he regarded as a political protege He advised Pelham to make use of his seat in the Commons to serve as a bridge between the King and Parliament just as Walpole had done 77 78 During this time Walpole also made two interventions in the Lords The first was in January 1744 in the debate on Hanoverian troops being kept in British pay Walpole prevented them from losing the troops In his second intervention Walpole with fear of a Jacobite inspired invasion in February 1744 made a speech on the situation Frederick Prince of Wales usually hostile to Walpole warmly received him at his court the next day most likely because his father s throne and the future of the whole Hanoverian dynasty was at risk from the Stuart Pretender 79 Along with his political interests in his last years Walpole enjoyed the pleasures of the hunt Back at his recently rebuilt country seat in Houghton Norfolk such pastimes were denied him due to dismal weather 80 He also enjoyed the beauties of the countryside His art collection gave him particular pleasure He had spent much money in the 1720s and 1730s in building up a collection of Old Masters from all over Europe Walpole also concerned himself with estate matters 79 His health never good deteriorated rapidly toward the end of 1744 Walpole died in London on 18 March 1745 from a bladder stone aged 68 years and was buried at the Church of St Martin at Tours on the Haughton estate 81 His earldom passed to his eldest son Robert who was in turn succeeded by his only son George Upon the death of the third Earl the earldom was inherited by the first Earl s younger son Horace Walpole who is now remembered for his many thousands of insightful letters published in 48 volumes by Yale University Press 82 The title died with him in 1797 Legacy Edit Walpole s reign a contemporary political satire Walpole exercised a tremendous influence on the politics of his day The Tories became a minor insignificant faction and the Whigs became a dominant and largely unopposed party His influence on the development of the uncodified constitution of Great Britain was less momentous even though he is regarded as Great Britain s first prime minister 75 He relied primarily on the favour of the King rather than the support of the House of Commons His power stemmed from his personal influence instead of the influence of his office Most of his immediate successors were comparatively speaking extremely weak It would take several decades more for the premiership to develop into the most powerful and most important office in the country citation needed Walpole s strategy of keeping Great Britain at peace contributed greatly to the country s prosperity Walpole also managed to secure the position of the Hanoverian Dynasty and effectively countervailed Jacobitism The Jacobite threat ended soon after Walpole s term ended with the defeat of the rebellion of 1745 Later in the century the Whig MP Edmund Burke admitted him into the whig pantheon 83 Burke wrote He was an honorable man and a sound Whig He was not as the Jacobites and discontented Whigs of his time have represented him and as ill informed people still represent him a prodigal and corrupt minister They charged him in their libels and seditious conversations as having first reduced corruption to a system Such was their cant But he was far from governing by corruption He governed by party attachments The charge of systematic corruption is less applicable to him perhaps than to any minister who ever served the crown for so great a length of time He gained over very few from the Opposition Without being a genius of the first class he was an intelligent prudent and safe minister He loved peace and he helped to communicate the same disposition to nations at least as warlike and restless as that in which he had the chief direction of affairs With many virtues public and private he had his faults but his faults were superficial A careless coarse and over familiar style of discourse without sufficient regard to persons or occasions and an almost total want of political decorum were the errours sic by which he was most hurt in the public opinion and those through which his enemies obtained the greatest advantage over him But justice must be done The prudence steadiness and vigilance of that man joined to the greatest possible lenity in his character and his politics preserved the crown to this royal family and with it their laws and liberties to this country 84 Lord Chesterfield expressed scepticism as to whether an impartial Character of Sr Robert Walpole will or can be transmitted to Posterity for he governed this Kingdom so long that the various passions of Mankind mingled and in a manner incorporated themselves with every thing that was said or writt concerning him Never was Man more flattered nor more abused and his long power was probably the chief cause of both 85 Chesterfield claimed he was much acquainted with him both in his publick and his private life In private life he was good natured chearfull social Inelegant in his manners loose in his morals He had a coarse wit which he was too free of for a man in his station as it is always inconsistent with dignity He was very able as a Minister but without a certain elevation of mind He was both the ablest Parliament man and the ablest manager of a Parliament that I believe ever lived Money not prerogative was the chief engine of his administration and he employed it with a success that in a manner disgraced humanity When he found any body proof against pecuniary temptations which alass was but seldom he had recourse to still a worse art For he laughed at and ridiculed all notions of publick virtue and the love of one s country calling them the chimerical school boy flights of classical learning declaring himself at the same time no Saint no Spartan no reformer He would frequently ask young fellows at their first appearance in the world while their honest hearts were yet untainted well are you to be an old Roman a patriot you will soon come off of that and grow wiser And thus he was more dangerous to the morals than to the libertys of his country to which I am persuaded that he meaned no ill in his heart His name will not be recorded in history among the best men or the best Ministers but much much less ought it to be ranked among the worst 86 10 Downing Street represents another part of Walpole s legacy George II offered this home to Walpole as a personal gift in 1732 but Walpole accepted it only as the official residence of the First Lord of the Treasury taking up his residence there on 22 September 1735 His immediate successors did not always reside in Number 10 preferring their larger private residences but the home has nevertheless become established as the official residence of the prime minister in his or her capacity as First Lord of the Treasury 34 Walpole has attracted attention from heterodox economists as a pioneer of protectionist policies in the form of tariffs and subsidies to woollen manufacturers As a result the industry became Britain s primary export enabling the country to import the raw materials and food that fueled the industrial revolution 87 Walpole is immortalised in St Stephen s Hall where he and other notable Parliamentarians look on at visitors to Parliament 88 Walpole built Houghton Hall in Norfolk as his country seat citation needed He also left behind a collection of art which he had assembled during his career His grandson the 3rd Earl of Orford sold many of the works in this collection to the Russian Empress Catherine II in 1779 This collection then regarded as one of the finest in Europe 89 now lies in the State Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg Russia In 2013 the Hermitage loaned the collection to Houghton for display following the original William Kent hanging plan recently discovered at Houghton 90 The nursery rhyme Who Killed Cock Robin may allude to the fall of Walpole who carried the popular nickname Cock Robin 91 page needed Contemporaries satirized the Walpole regime as the Robinocracy or as the Robinarchy 92 Various locations are named after Walpole including Walpole Street in Wolverhampton England 93 and the towns of Walpole Massachusetts founded in 1724 and Orford New Hampshire incorporated in 1761 in the United States 34 93 Marriages and issue EditCatherine Shorter Edit Arms of Shorter of Bybrook Kent Sable a lion rampant or ducally crowned argent between three battle axes of the last headed of the second 94 On 30 July 1700 Walpole married Catherine Shorter 1682 1737 95 the eldest daughter 96 and co heiress 97 of John Shorter of Bybrook in Ashford Kent the son of Sir John Shorter 1625 1688 Lord Mayor of London by his wife Elizabeth Philipps born c 1664 a daughter of Sir Erasmus Philipps 3rd Baronet 95 She was described as a woman of exquisite beauty and accomplished manners 12 Her 20 000 dowry was according to Walpole s brother Horatio Walpole spent on the wedding christenings and jewels 98 Her sister and co heiress Charlotte Shorter married as his third wife Francis Seymour Conway 1st Baron Conway 1679 1731 2 by whom she was the mother of Francis Seymour Conway 1st Marquess of Hertford 1718 1794 Sir John Shorter c 1625 1688 Lord Mayor of London married Isabel Birkhead a sister of Edward Birkhead d 1662 of Richmond House Twickenham Serjeant at Arms in the House of Commons in 1648 a Quaker Magistrate and the principal landowner in the parish of Twickenham 99 Catherine s youngest son Horace later built Strawberry Hill House on land purchased by him at Twickenham Catherine Shorter died on 20 August 1737 and was buried at Houghton 95 with a monument in the south aisle of the King Henry VII Chapel Westminster Abbey 100 erected by her son Horatio in the form of a life size white marble statue a copy by Filippo della Valle of a Roman statue of Livia or Pudicitia in the Villa Mattei in Rome e On the plinth sculpted by John Michael Rysbrack is the following inscription written by Horace 102 To the memory of Catherine Lady Walpole eldest daughter of John Shorter Esqr of Bybrook in Kent and first wife of Sir Robert Walpole afterwards Earl of Orford Horace her youngest son consecrates this monument She had beauty and wit without vice or vanity and cultivated the Arts without affectation She was devout tho without bigotry to any sect and was without prejudice to any party tho the wife of a minister whose power she esteemed but when she could employ it to benefit the miserable or to reward the meritorious She loved a private life tho born to shine in public and was an ornament to courts untainted by them She died Aug 20 1737 By Catherine Shorter he had two daughters and three sons 100 Robert Walpole 2nd Earl of Orford eldest son and heir who in 1724 married Margaret Rolle 17 January 1709 13 January 1781 later suo jure 15th Baroness Clinton 103 They had one son 100 George Walpole 3rd Earl of Orford and 16th Baron Clinton 1730 1791 who left no legitimate children and died insane Katherine Walpole 100 who died unmarried and without issue 104 Mary Walpole who on 14 September 1723 married George Cholmondeley 3rd Earl of Cholmondeley 100 They had sons and daughters 105 106 and the Houghton Estate eventually became the inheritance of the Cholmondeley family She died at Aix en Provence in 1731 and was buried at Malpas Cheshire 100 107 Edward Walpole who died unmarried but had four illegitimate children by his mistress Dorothy Clement Edward born in 1737 died in 1771 without issue Laura the eldest daughter who married Bishop Frederick Keppel Maria Walpole d 1807 Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh the second daughter who married firstly James Waldegrave 2nd Earl Waldegrave and secondly Prince William Henry Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh the brother of King King George III Charlotte the youngest daughter who married Lionel Tollemache 5th Earl of Dysart 100 Horatio Walpole 4th Earl of Orford 24 September 1717 2 March 1797 of Strawberry Hill House Twickenham youngest son the diarist known to history as Horace Walpole He became the 4th and last Earl of Orford on his nephew s death in 1791 and died unmarried and without issue Maria Skerritt Edit Arms of Skerritt Or a chief indented sable 108 Prior to the death of his first wife Walpole took on a mistress Maria Skerittt d 1738 a fashionable socialite of wit and beauty with an independent fortune of 30 000 109 the daughter and sole heiress of Thomas Skerittt d 1738 aliter Skerret Skeritt etc a wealthy Irish merchant living in Dover Street Mayfair London 110 They had been living together openly in Richmond Park and Houghton Hall since before 1728 100 and married at some time before March 1738 She died on 4 June 1739 following a miscarriage Walpole considered her indispensable to his happiness and her loss plunged him into a deplorable and comfortless condition which led to a severe illness 111 By Maria Skerritt he had one daughter born before the marriage but subsequently legitimated f Maria Walpole 100 who after her legitimation acquired the style of the daughter of an earl as Lady Maria Walpole 112 In 1746 she married Colonel Charles Churchill 1720 1812 of Chalfont an illegitimate son of General Charles Churchill and became the king s housekeeper at Windsor Castle 100 113 By Charles Churchill she had daughters including Sophia Churchill who married her relative Horatio Walpole 2nd Earl of Orford 1752 1822 of the second creation of that earldom the son of Horatio Walpole 1st Earl of Orford son of Horatio Walpole 1st Baron Walpole of Wolterton 9th brother of Prime Minister Robert Walpole 1st Earl of Orford 114 Mary Churchill who on 10 May 1777 became the second wife of Charles Cadogan 1st Earl Cadogan 1728 1807 and had issue before being divorced in 1796 by her husband for criminal conversation with Rev Mr Cooper 115 See also EditBaron Delamere List of prime ministers of the United Kingdom Marquess of CholmondeleyNotes Edit As a young man Sir Robert bought shares of the South Seas Co which monopolized trade with Spain the Caribbean and South America The speculative market for slaves rum and mahogany spawned a frenzy that had ramifications throughout Europe when it collapsed But Walpole bought at the bottom and sold at the top Tinterow said That fortune enabled him to build Houghton 13 Sir Philip Meadows Jnr d 1757 the son of Sir Philip Meadows Snr d 1718 was a commissioner of excise from 1698 to 1700 was on 2 July 1700 appointed knight marshal of the king s household and formally knighted by William III on 23 Dec 1700 at Hampton Court 21 After all the pains that have been taken to detect the villanys of the directors and their friends I am afraid they will at last flip thro their fingers and that nothing further will be done as to confiscation hanging amp c There certainly is a majority in the house of commons that are willing to do themselves and the kingdom justice but they act so little in concert together He Thomas Brodrick is the spring that gives motion to the whole body and the only man that either can or will set matters in a true light and expose and baffle the schemes of the skreen amp c The house were five hours in a committee and were amuse d and banter d by questions and amendments propos d by the skreen amp c so that they rose at last without coming to any resolution the kingdom is like to be very happy when the skreen and the gentleman Sunderland with the bloody nose act in perfect concert together 40 In 1734 a new silver mace weighing 168 ounces gilt and finely exchased was presented to the city by the right honourable Sir Rob Walpole on the cup part of it are Sir Robert s arms and the arms of the city it was first carried before the Mayor on the 29th of May 65 In five of the niches on pedestals are I A cart in plaifter bronzed of Catharine Lady Walpole the model of her statue in Westminster Abbey executed at Rome by Valory and taken from the Livia or Pudicitia in the Villa Mattei now called Villa Celimontana 101 No issue is given in Burke s Extinct Peerage to this second marriage of Sir Robert Walpole but in Ancient Peerages is this Sir Robert Walpole married in 1737 Maria daughter and sole heir of Thomas Skerret who died in 1738 he had a daughter from her before marriage Maria his Majesty s housekeeper at Windsor and wife of Charles Churchill She was legitimated and given the rank of an Earl s daughter full citation needed References Edit Robinocracy Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 6 August 2020 Speck W A 1977 Stability and Strife England 1714 1760 p 203 O Gorman Frank 1997 The Long Eighteenth Century British political and social history 1688 1832 p 71 Hoppit Julian 2000 A Land of Liberty England 1689 1727 p 410 a b c d Sir Robert Walpole Whig 1721 1742 Government of the United Kingdom blog History of government 20 November 2014 Retrieved 10 September 2018 Dickinson H T 2003 Walpole Sir Robert In Loads David ed Readers Guide to British History p 1338 Strangio Paul t Hart Paul Walter James 2013 Understanding Prime Ministerial Performance Comparative perspectives Oxford U Press p 225 ISBN 9780199666423 Leadam 1899 pp 178 179 a b Leadam 1899 p 179 a b ACAD amp WLPL695R Sir Anthony Seldon programme by 2 April 2021 The Prime Minister at 300 Episode 1 BBC Radio 4 a b c Leadam 1899 p 180 a b Glentzer Molly 20 June 2014 Houghton Hall peeks at a real Downton Abbey Houston Chronicle Retrieved 5 March 2016 Leadam 1899 p 180 181 Leadam 1899 pp 181 82 Speck W T 1977 Stability and Strife England 1714 1760 pp 206 209 a b Leadam 1899 p 183 a b Leadam 1899 p 184 archive org A Report from the Committee of Secrecy appointed by order of the House of Commons to examine several books and papers laid before the House relating to the late negotiations of peace and commerce amp c reported on the ninth of June 1715 by Robert Walpole Chairman a b Oldmixon Mr John 1735 The History of England During the Reigns of King William and Queen Mary Queen Anne King George I Great Britain T Cox p 627 Retrieved 4 March 2013 a b Seccombe Thomas 1885 1900 Meadows Philip DNB00 Vol 3 Dictionary of National Biography Retrieved 7 March 2015 Household of Queen Caroline 1727 37 University of London The Institute of Historical Research IHR Senate House Malet Street London WC1E 7HU Retrieved 4 March 2013 Maid of Honour 172 Meadows Mary Transferred from household of Princess 1727 First occ 1728 Chamberlayne 1728 pt iii 264 A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire Earl Manvers Lineage Baronetage Henry Colburn 1839 pp 684 5 Retrieved 4 March 2013 White William 1858 Noes and Queries Page 370 Oxford University Press 1858 Retrieved 13 April 2014 Collins Arthur 1812 Meadows Pedigree Collins s Peerage of England Genealogical Biographical and Historical Volume 5 F C and J Rivington Otridge and son pp 722 3 Retrieved 9 April 2015 Leadam 1899 pp 184 186 a b Leadam 1899 p 185 Leadam 1899 p 185 cites Parl Hist 9 May 1717 vii 460 Leadam 1899 p 185 cites Parl Hist 16 April 1717 vii 449 Hill Brian W 1998 Robert Harley Speaker Secretary of State and Premier Minister Yale University Press p 330 George II BBC History BBC Retrieved 20 January 2017 a b c d e f g h i Leadam 1899 p 187 Thorpe Vanessa 3 December 2006 Diaries reveal passions at the court of King George The Guardian Retrieved 10 September 2018 a b c d Plumb John Robert Walpole 1st earl of Orford Encyclopedia Britannica prime minister of Great Britain Retrieved 10 September 2018 Leadam 1899 p 186 WALPOLE Robert 1676 1745 of Houghton Norf www historyofparliamentonline org Retrieved 10 September 2018 Sir Robert Walpole first Earl of Orford 1676 1745 historyhome co uk Retrieved 10 September 2018 The Birth Of Modern Politics The Rise of Robert Walpole Plantagenet Lions 2 February 2015 Retrieved 10 September 2018 a b Stewart Terry The South Sea Bubble of 1720 Historic UK Retrieved 10 September 2018 a b Letter from St John Brodrick to Lord Midleton 24 May 1721 Coxe 1798 ii 216 17 Marples Alice 1 April 2021 Sir Robert Walpole Britain s first Prime Minister The National Archives blog Retrieved 2 April 2022 Blick Andrew Jones George 1 January 2012 The Institution of Prime Minister gov uk Retrieved 3 April 2021 Charles Townshend Biography Retrieved 10 September 2018 John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville Encyclopedia Britannica British statesman Retrieved 10 September 2018 BBC History Historic Figures Sir Robert Walpole 1676 1745 Retrieved 10 September 2018 Leadam 1899 p 188 Henry Saint John 1st Viscount Bolingbroke British politician Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 10 September 2018 a b BBC History George I Retrieved 10 September 2018 Ferguson Oliver W Jonathan Swift and Ireland Ehrenpreis Irvin Jonathan Swift Vol III Coxe William 1978 Memoirs of the Life and Administration of Sir Robert Walpole Earl of Orford a b c Leadam 1899 p 190 This month in history Sir Robert Walpole becomes Britain s first prime minister The Gazette Hall of fame Robert Walpole Britain s first PM thegazette co uk Retrieved 10 September 2018 Robert Walpole 2nd Earl of Orford Person National Portrait Gallery npg org uk Retrieved 10 September 2018 Coxe William 1816 Memoirs of the Life and Administration of Sir Robert Walpole Earl of Orford Longman Hurst Rees Orme amp Brown p 19 robert walpole treaty of vienna Kramnick Isaac 1992 Bolingbroke and His Circle The Politics of Nostalgia in the Age of Walpole Handley Stuart Rowe M J McBryde W H October 2007 Pulteney William earl of Bath 1684 1764 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 22889 Subscription or UK public library membership required Varey Simon April 1993 The Craftsman Prose Studies 16 1 58 77 doi 10 1080 01440359308586487 Downie J A 1986 Jonathan Swift Political Writer A petition to remove Sir Robert Walpole part 1 samueljohnson com Retrieved 10 September 2018 C Grant Robertson 1921 England under the Hanoverians p 66 A W Ward 1909 The Cambridge Modern History Volume VI the Eighteenth Century p 46 ISBN 9780521078146 a b Langford Paul 1998 A Polite and Commercial People England 1727 1783 Oxford University Press a b The city of Norwich chapter 37 Of the city in the time of King George II An Essay Towards A Topographical History of the County of Norfolk Report Vol 3 the History of the City and County of Norwich Part I London UK W Miller 1806 pp 443 454 Retrieved 3 March 2013 via british history ac uk Taylor Taylor Fairfax Fairfax Meadows 1840 The Suffolk Bartholomeans A Memoir of the Ministerial and Domestic History Illustrative Outline of the Meadows Pedigree W Pickering pp 4 6 Retrieved 3 March 2013 a b Leadam 1899 pp 195 196 Leadam 1899 pp 195 196 10 Geo II c 28 Crean P J 1938 The Stage Licensing Act of 1737 Modern Philology 35 3 239 255 doi 10 1086 388315 JSTOR 434130 S2CID 159897178 Horne Thomas October December 1980 Politics in a corrupt society William Arnall s defense of Robert Walpole Journal of the History of Ideas 41 4 601 614 doi 10 2307 2709276 JSTOR 2709276 Laybourn Keith 2001 British Political Leaders A biographical dictionary ABC CLIO pp 319 320 Plumb J H 1960 Sir Robert Walpole the Making of a Statesman The King s Minister Cresset Press Speck W A 1977 Stability and Strife England 1714 1760 Harvard U Press pp 235 238 History of Sir Robert Walpole Government of the United Kingdom Retrieved 10 September 2018 a b British Prime Ministers Sir Robert Walpole britannia com Retrieved 10 September 2018 Oates Jonathan 2006 Sir Robert Walpole after his Fall from Power 1742 1745 History 91 302 218 230 Browning 1975 p 117 Aotes Jonathan April 2006 Sir Robert Walpole after his fall from power 1742 1745 History 91 302 218 230 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229x 2006 00364 x a b Robert Walpole 1st Earl of Orford National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 10 September 2018 BL Add MS 63750 fo 34r Church of St Martin Houghton Norfolk British Listed Buildings Retrieved 11 May 2017 Smith W H 1983 Horace Walpole s Correspondence The Yale University Library Gazette Vol 58 no 1 2 pp 17 28 Taylor Stephen January 2008 2004 Walpole Robert first earl of Orford 1676 1745 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 28601 Subscription or UK public library membership required Burke Edmund 1962 An Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs The Library of Liberal Arts pp 62 63 Franklin 1993 p 114 Franklin 1993 pp 114 115 Chang Ha Joon 2010 23 Things They Don t Tell You about Capitalism London UK Allen Lane p 70 St Stephen s Hall UK Parliament Redford George 1888 Sale of the Houghton Gallery Art Sales A history of sales of pictures and other works of art London UK p 356 357 Houghton revisited www christies com Special exhibition Retrieved 10 September 2018 Opie Iona Archibald Opie Peter 1997 Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 860088 6 Kramnick Isaac 1992 Bolingbroke and His Circle The Politics of Nostalgia in the Age of Walpole Cornell University Press p 20 ISBN 9780801480010 Retrieved 15 August 2014 Walpole s system was depicted as a unique form of government the Robinocracy or Robinarchy a b British Prime Ministers Sir Robert Walpole historytoday com Retrieved 10 September 2018 Burke Sir Bernard The General Armory London 1884 p 924 Shorter of London granted 1687 a b c Cokayne G E Doubleday H A de Walden Howard eds 1945 The Complete Peerage or a history of the House of Lords and all its members from the earliest times Vol 10 Oakham to Richmond 2nd ed London UK The St Catherine Press p 83 Per inscription on her monument in Westminster Abbey All her brothers died unmarried see Walpole Pedigree 1776 Strawberry Hill Twickenham File Walpole Pedigree 1776 Strawberry Hill Twickenham png Leadam 1899 p 180 cites Horace Walpole s Letters viii 423 The Twickenham Museum The history centre for Twickenham Whitton Teddington and the Hamptons a b c d e f g h i j Leadam 1899 p 205 Walpole Horace 1774 A description of the villa of Horace Walpole youngest son of Sir Robert Walpole earl of Orford at Strawberry hill near Twickenham The Tribune p 76 via archive org With an inventory of the furniture pictures curiosities amp c See image www westminster abbey org 1 Toynbee Helen Mrs Paget Toynbee 1903 The Letters of Horace Walpole p 81 Burke John 1833 A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire H Colburn and R Bentley p 262 Eller George 1861 Memorials Archaeological and Ecclesiastical of the West Winch Manors from the Earliest Ages to the Present Period Thew amp Son p 100 Edmondson Joseph 1785 The Present Peerages With Plates of Arms and an Introduction to Heraldry Together with Several Useful Lists Incident to the Work J Dodsley p 58 Debrett John Collen G W 1840 Debrett s Peerage of England Scotland and Ireland revised corrected and continued by G W Collen p 159 Burke Sir Bernard The General Armory London 1884 p 931 Skerett Skerit of Peter Tavy near Tavistock and of Buckland Monachorum Devon Leadam 1899 p 205 cites a letter from Bishop Hare to F Naylor 9 March 1738 Hare MSS p 238 Leadam 1899 p 205 cites Gent Mag 1734 p 50 Hervey Memoirs i 115 Pope Works iii 141 note 1 Gent Mag 1738 p 324 Leadam 1899 pp 205 206 Farrer Edmund 1908 Portraits in Suffolk houses West B Quaritch p 88 Clark J C D July 2002 The Memoirs and Speeches of James 2nd Earl Waldegrave 1742 1763 Cambridge University Press pp 46 87 250 ISBN 978 0 521 52689 0 Debrett John 1814 The Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain amp Ireland In Two Volumes England G Woodfall p 327 Retrieved 30 June 2013 Cokayne G E Gibbs Vicary eds 1912 Earl Cadogan The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom extant extinct or dormant Vol 2 Bass to Canning 2nd ed London UK The St Catherine Press p 462 note b Sources Edit Walpole Robert WLPL695R A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Aotes Jonathan April 2006 Sir Robert Walpole after his fall from power 1742 1745 History 91 302 218 230 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229x 2006 00364 x Browning Reed 1975 The Duke of Newcastle New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 01746 5 Franklin Colin 1993 Lord Chesterfield His character and characters Aldershot Scolar Press p 114 Hoppit Julian 2000 A Land of Liberty England 1689 1727 Langford Paul 1998 A Polite and Commercial People England 1727 1783 Oxford University Press pp 9 58 Robin s Reign on cover Leadam Isaac Saunders 1899 Sir Robert Walpole a short biography via Amazon com Leadam Isaac Saunders 1899 Walpole Robert 1676 1745 in Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography vol 59 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 178 207 O Gorman Frank 1997 The Long Eighteenth Century British political and social history 1688 1832 Speck W A 1977 Stability and Strife England 1714 1760 Taylor Stephen January 2008 2004 Walpole Robert first earl of Orford 1676 1745 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 28601 Subscription or UK public library membership required Handley Stuart Rowe M J McBryde W H October 2007 Pulteney William earl of Bath 1684 1764 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 22889 Subscription or UK public library membership required Further reading Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Robert Walpole Black Jeremy 2001 Walpole in Power Stroud Sutton Publishing ISBN 978 0 7509 2523 5 Blick Andrew and George Jones At Power s Elbow Aides to the Prime Minister from Robert Walpole to David Cameron Biteback Publishing 2013 Courtney William Prideaux 1911 Orford Robert Walpole 1st Earl of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed pp 254 256 Dickinson Harry T 1972 Walpole and his critics History Today 3 June 1972 Vol 22 Issue 6 pp 410 419 online Dickinson Harry T 1973 Walpole and the Whig Supremacy London English Universities Press ISBN 978 0 340 11515 2 Field Ophelia 2008 The Kit Cat Club Friends who imagined a nation Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 00 717892 6 Hartop Christopher 2014 Sir Robert Walpole s Silver London Silver Society ISBN 978 0 9549144 3 1 Hill Brian W 1989 Sir Robert Walpole Sole and Prime Minister London Hamish Hamilton ISBN 978 0 241 12738 4 Holmes Geoffrey and Daniel Szechi The age of oligarchy pre industrial Britain 1722 1783 1993 excerpt The Age of Walpole pp 3 88 Marshall Dorothy Eighteenth Century England 1714 1784 2nd ed 1974 pp 101 191 political narrative Murdoch Tessa ed Noble Households Eighteenth Century Inventories of Great English Houses Cambridge John Adamson 2006 ISBN 978 0 9524322 5 8 OCLC 78044620 For an inventory of Houghton Hall two months after Walpole s death in 1745 see pp 170 84 Pearce Edward 2008 The Great Man Sir Robert Walpole London Pimlico ISBN 978 1 84413 405 2 Plumb J H Sir Robert Walpole History Today Oct 1951 1 10 pp 9 16 Plumb J H 1956 1960 Sir Robert Walpole London Cresset Press the standard scholarly biography vol 1 Sir Robert Walpole The Making of a Statesman 1956 to 1722 vol 2 Sir Robert Walpole The King s Minister 1960 ends in 1734 vol 3 was never finished 1972 reprint combined vol 1 and vol 2 as Sir Robert Walpole ISBN 0678035504 Plumb J H 1967 The Growth of Political Stability in England 1675 1725 London Macmillan and Co Rodger N A M 2006 Command of the Ocean A Naval History of Britain 1649 1815 London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 102690 9 Williams Basil The Whig Supremacy 1714 1760 1939 2nd ed 1962 online edition pp 180 212 covers his ministry 1721 42 Williams Basil The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole English Historical Review 15 58 Apr 1900 pp 251 276 in JSTOR The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole Continued English Historical Review 15 59 July 1900 pp 479 494 in JSTOR The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole Continued English Historical Review 59 60 Oct 1900 pp 665 698 in JSTOR The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole English Historical Review 16 61 Jan 1901 pp 67 83 in JSTOR The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole Continued English Historical Review 16 62 Apr 1901 pp 308 327 in JSTOR The Foreign Policy of England under Walpole Continued English Historical Review 16 53 July 1901 pp 439 451 in JSTORPrimary sources Edit Coxe William Memoirs of the Life and Administration of Sir Robert Walpole Earl of Orford 3 vol 1800 onlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Walpole Wikiquote has quotations related to Robert Walpole Robert Walpole s biography on the UK history of government blog Houghton Hall Cholmondeley Castle Robert Walpole 1st Earl of Orford at the National Portrait Gallery London Ancestors of Robert WalpoleParliament of EnglandPreceded byRobert WalpoleThomas Howard Member of Parliament for Castle Rising1701 1702 With Thomas Howard 1701Robert Cecil 1701The Earl of Ranelagh 1701 1702Marquess of Hartington 1702 Succeeded bySir Thomas LittletonHoratio WalpoleParliament of Great BritainPreceded bySir John TurnerSir Charles Turner Member of Parliament for King s Lynn1702 1712 Served alongside Sir Charles Turner Succeeded bySir Charles TurnerSir John TurnerPreceded bySir Charles TurnerSir John Turner Member of Parliament for King s Lynn1713 1742 Succeeded bySir John TurnerEdward BaconPolitical officesPreceded byHenry St John Secretary at War1708 1710 Succeeded byGeorge GranvillePreceded bySir Thomas Littleton Treasurer of the Navy1710 1711 Succeeded byCharles CaesarPreceded byJohn HoweThomas Moore Paymaster of the Forces1714 1715 Succeeded byThe Earl of LincolnPreceded byThe Earl of Carlisle First Lord of the Treasury1715 1717 Succeeded byThe Viscount StanhopePreceded bySir Richard Onslow Chancellor of the Exchequer1715 1717Preceded byThe Earl of Lincoln Paymaster of the Forces1720 1721 Succeeded byThe Lord CornwallisFirstNone recognised before Prime Minister of Great Britain1721 1742 Succeeded byThe Earl of WilmingtonPreceded byThe Earl of Sunderland First Lord of the Treasury1721 1742Preceded bySir John Pratt Chancellor of the Exchequer1721 1742 Succeeded bySamuel SandysUnknown Leader of the House of Commons1721 1742Peerage of Great BritainNew creation Earl of Orford1742 1745 Succeeded byRobert Walpole Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Walpole amp oldid 1147919032, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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