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Secretary of State for the Southern Department

The Secretary of State for the Southern Department[1] was a position in the cabinet of the government of the Kingdom of Great Britain up to 1782, when the Southern Department became the Home Office.[2][3]

Great Britain
Secretary of State for the Southern Department
Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Great Britain Government
The Southern Department
StyleThe Right Honourable
(Formal prefix)
Member ofBritish Cabinet
SeatWestminster, London
AppointerThe British Monarch
on advice of the Prime Minister
Term lengthNo fixed term
Formation1660-1782
First holderEdward Nicholas
Final holderWills Hill, 1st Earl of Hillsborough

History edit

Before 1782, the responsibilities of the two British Secretaries of State for the Northern and the Southern departments were divided not based on the principles of modern ministerial divisions, but geographically. The Secretary of State for the Southern Department was responsible for Ireland, the Channel Islands, France, Spain, Portugal, the Old Swiss Confederacy, the states of Italy, and the Ottoman Empire. He was also responsible for the American colonies until 1768, when the charge was given to the Secretary of State for the Colonies. The Secretary of State for the Northern Department was responsible for relations with the Dutch Republic, Scandinavia, Poland, Russia, and the Holy Roman Empire. Domestic responsibilities in England and Wales were shared between the two Secretaries. After the union with Scotland in 1707, the two secretaries also took responsibility for Scotland when there was no Secretary of State for Scotland in office.[4]

Until 1706, the practice was generally for the senior official to lead the Southern Department, and the junior the Northern Department, with the Northern Secretary being transferred to the Southern Department when a vacancy arose at the latter.[4] During the reigns of George I and George II, however, the Northern Department began to be seen as the more important, since its responsibilities included the monarchs' ancestral home of Hanover.[5] During the reign of George III, the two departments were of approximately equal importance.[6]

In 1782, the two Secretaries of State were reformed as the Secretary of State for the Home Department and the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs.[7]

List of Southern Secretaries edit

Secretary of State for the Southern Department[8][9]
Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term of office Monarch
(Reign)
Ref.
  Sir Edward Nicholas
(1593–1669)
1 June
1660
20 October
1662
Charles II
 
(1660–1685)
[10]
  Henry Bennet
1st Earl of Arlington

(1618–1685) [a]
20 October
1662
11 September
1674
[11]
  Henry Coventry
MP for Droitwich
(c. 1618–1686)
11 September
1674
26 April
1680
[12]
  Robert Spencer
2nd Earl of Sunderland

(1641–1702)
26 April
1680
2 February
1681
  Sir Leoline Jenkins
MP for Oxford University
(c. 1625–1685)
2 February
1681
14 April
1684
[13]
  Robert Spencer
2nd Earl of Sunderland

(1641–1702)
14 April
1684
28 October
1688
James II
 
(1685–1688)
  Charles Middleton
2nd Earl of Middleton

(c. 1650–1719)
28 October
1688
2 December
1688
[14]
  Charles Talbot
12th Earl of Shrewsbury

(1660–1718)
14 February
1689
2 June
1690
Mary II
 
(1689–1694)
&
William III
 
(1689–1702)
  Daniel Finch
2nd Earl of Nottingham

(1647–1730) [b]
2 June
1690
November
1693
[15]
  Sir John Trenchard
MP for Poole
(1649–1695)
[c]
November
1693
27 April
1695
[16]
  Charles Talbot
1st Duke of Shrewsbury

(1660–1718)
27 April
1695
12 December
1698
  James Vernon
MP for Westminster
(1646–1727)
[d]
12 December
1698
14 May
1699
[17]
  Edward Villiers
1st Earl of Jersey

(c. 1656–1711)
14 May
1699
27 June
1700
  James Vernon
MP for Westminster
(1646–1727)
[e]
27 June
1700
4 January
1702
[17]
  Charles Montagu
4th Earl of Manchester

(c. 1662–1722)
4 January
1702
1 May
1702
Anne
 
(1702–1714)
  Daniel Finch
2nd Earl of Nottingham

(1647–1730)
2 May
1702
22 April
1704
[15]
  Sir Charles Hedges
MP for West Looe
(1650–1714)
[f]
18 May
1704
3 December
1706
[18]
  Charles Spencer
3rd Earl of Sunderland

(1675–1722)
3 December
1706
13 June
1710
[19]
  William Legge
1st Earl of Dartmouth

(1672–1750)
15 June
1710
6 August
1713
  Henry St John
1st Viscount Bolingbroke

(1678–1751)
17 August
1713
31 August
1714
[20]
George I
 
(1714–1727)
  James Stanhope
MP for Cockermouth
(1673–1721)
[g]
27 September
1714
22 June
1716
[21]
  Sir Paul Methuen
MP for Brackley
(c. 1672–1757)
[h]
22 June
1716
10 April
1717
[22]
  Joseph Addison
MP for Malmesbury
(1672–1719)
12 April
1717
14 March
1718
[23]
  James Craggs 'the Younger'
MP for Tregony
(1686–1721)
16 March
1718
16 February
1721
[24]
  John Carteret
2nd Baron Carteret

(1690–1763)
4 March
1721
31 March
1724
  Thomas Pelham-Holles
1st Duke of Newcastle

(1693–1768) [i]
6 April
1724
12 February
1748
George II
 
(1727–1760)
  John Russell
4th Duke of Bedford

(1710–1771)
12 February
1748
13 June
1751
  Robert Darcy
4th Earl of Holdernesse

(1718–1778)
18 June
1751
23 March
1754
  Sir Thomas Robinson
MP for Christchurch
(1695–1770)
24 March
1754
October
1755
[25]
  Henry Fox
MP for Windsor
(1705–1774)
14 November
1755
13 November
1756
[26]
  William Pitt 'the Elder'
MP for Okehampton
(1708–1778)
4 December
1756
6 April
1757
[27]
  Robert Darcy
4th Earl of Holdernesse

(1718–1778) [j]
6 April
1757
27 June
1757
  William Pitt 'the Elder'
MP for Bath
(1708–1778)
27 June
1757
5 October
1761
[27]
George III
 
(1760–1820)
  Charles Wyndham
2nd Earl of Egremont

(1710–1763)
9 October
1761
21 August
1763
[28]
  George Montagu-Dunk
2nd Earl of Halifax

(1716–1771)
9 September
1763
10 July
1765
  Henry Seymour Conway
MP for Thetford
(1719–1795)
12 July
1765
23 May
1766
[29]
  Charles Lennox
3rd Duke of Richmond

(1735–1806)
23 May
1766
29 July
1766
  William Petty
2nd Earl of Shelburne

(1737–1805)
30 July
1766
20 October
1768
[30]
  Thomas Thynne
3rd Viscount Weymouth

(1734–1796)
21 October
1768
12 December
1770
  William de Zuylestein
4th Earl of Rochford

(1717–1781)
19 December
1770
9 November
1775
  Thomas Thynne
3rd Viscount Weymouth

(1734–1796) [k]
9 November
1775
November
1779
  Wills Hill
1st Earl of Hillsborough

(1718–1793)
25 November
1779
27 March
1782
[31]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Returned as MP for Callington from 1661 to 1665; thereafter raised to the peerage of England as Baron Arlington, and created Earl of Arlington in 1672.
  2. ^ Served as sole Secretary of State from June to December 1690; again from March 1692 to March 1693.
  3. ^ Served as sole Secretary of State from November to March 1694.
  4. ^ Acting Secretary of State for the Southern Department.
  5. ^ Acting Secretary of State for the Southern Department from June to November 1700; official appointment from 5 November 1700.
  6. ^ Returned as MP for Calne from 1702 to 1705; thereafter returned as MP for West Looe from 1705 to 1713.
  7. ^ Returned as MP for Wendover from March 1715 to 1715; thereafter returned as MP for Cockermouth from 1715 to 1717.
  8. ^ Acting Secretary of State for the Southern Department from May to December 1723; official appointment from 12 December 1716.
  9. ^ In February 1746 John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville held office for two days, however as the formalities of his appointment were not completed sources typically do not include him as a Southern Secretary.
  10. ^ Served as sole Secretary of State.
  11. ^ Served as sole Secretary of State from March to October 1799.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Constantine, Stephen (2009). Community and Identity: The Making of Modern Gibraltar Since 1704. Oxford University Press. p. 69. ISBN 9780719080548.
  2. ^ FCO Historians (April 1991). "The FCO: Policy, People and Places (1782-1995)". History Notes (2). Foreign and Commonwealth Office: 1. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ "The National Archives' catalogue: Records assembled by the State Paper Office, including papers of the Secretaries of State up to 1782". The National Archives.
  4. ^ a b Thomson, Mark A. (1932). The Secretaries of State: 1681-1782. London: Frank Cass. pp. 2–3.
  5. ^ Cass (1932), pp. 21-22
  6. ^ Cass (1932), p. 4
  7. ^ Sainty, J. C. (1973). "Introduction". Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 2 - Officials of the Secretaries of State 1660-1782. University of London. pp. 1–21 – via British History Online. At the Restoration [in 1660] the practice of appointing two Secretaries of State, which was well established before the Civil War, was resumed. Apart from the modifications which were made necessary by the occasional existence of a third secretaryship, the organisation of the secretariat underwent no fundamental change from that time until the reforms of 1782 which resulted in the emergence of the Home and Foreign departments. ... English domestic affairs remained the responsibility of both Secretaries throughout the period. In the field of foreign affairs there was a division into a Northern and a Southern Department, each of which was the responsibility of one Secretary. The distinction between the two departments emerged only gradually. It was not until after 1689 that their names passed into general currency. Nevertheless the division of foreign business itself can, in its broad outlines, be detected in the early years of the reign of Charles II.
  8. ^ Sainty, ed: J.C. (1974). Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 2, Officials of the Secretaries of State 1660-1782. University of London. pp. 22–58.
  9. ^ 'Lists of appointments', in Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 2, Officials of the Secretaries of State 1660-1782, ed. J C Sainty (London, 1973), pp. 22-58. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/office-holders/vol2/pp22-58 [accessed 18 July 2017].
  10. ^ Baron, Sabrina Alcorn; Thrush, Andrew. "NICHOLAS, Edward (1593-1669), of Dover Castle, Kent and King Street, Westminster; later of West Horsley, Surr". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  11. ^ Ferris, John. P. "BENNET, Sir Henry (1618-85)". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  12. ^ Rowlands, Edward. "COVENTRY, Hon. Henry (c.1618-86), of Piccadilly Hall, The Haymarket, Westminster and West Bailey Lodge, Enfield, Mdx". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  13. ^ Henning, Basil Duke. "JENKINS, Sir Leoline (c.1625-85), of Jesus College, Oxford and Hammersmith, Mdx". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  14. ^ Henning, Basil Duke. "MIDDLETON, Charles, 2nd Earl of Middleton [S]. (c.1650-1719)". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  15. ^ a b Ferris, John. P. "FINCH, Daniel (1647-1730), of Kensington, Mdx and Milton Ernest, Beds". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  16. ^ Ferris, John. P. "TRENCHARD, John (1649-95), of the Middle Temple". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  17. ^ a b Ferris, John. P. "VERNON, James (1646-1727), of Frith Street, Westminster". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  18. ^ Handley, Stuart. "HEDGES, Sir Charles (1650-1714), of Richmond, Surr.; Compton Bassett, Wilts.; and St. James's Park, Westminster". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  19. ^ Handley, Stuart. "SPENCER, Charles, Lord Spencer (1675-1722)". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  20. ^ Handley, Stuart. "ST. JOHN, Henry II (1678-1752), of Bucklebury, Berks". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  21. ^ Handley, Stuart. "STANHOPE, James (1673-1721), of London". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  22. ^ Seghwick, Romney R. "METHUEN, Paul (c.1672-1757), of Bishops Cannings, Wilts". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  23. ^ Lea, R. S. "ADDISON, Joseph (1672-1719), of Bilton, Warws. and Holland House, Kensington". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  24. ^ Segwick, Romney R. "CRAGGS, James (1686-1721)". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 30 November 2017.
  25. ^ Sedgwick, Romney R. "ROBINSON, Thomas (1695-1770), of Newby, Yorks". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  26. ^ Namier, Sir Lewis. "FOX, Henry (1705-74), of Holland House, Kensington". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  27. ^ a b Brooke, John. "PITT, William (1708-78), of Hayes, Kent". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  28. ^ Cruickshanks, Eveline. "WYNDHAM, Charles (1710-63), of Orchard Wyndham, Som". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 2 December 2017.
  29. ^ Brooke, John. "CONWAY, Hon. Henry Seymour (1719-95), of Park Place, Berks". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  30. ^ Namier, Sir Lewis. "PETTY, William, Visct. Fitzmaurice (1737-1805), of Bowood, Wilts". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 2 December 2017.
  31. ^ Brooke, John. "HILL, Wills, 1st Earl of Hillsborough [I] (1718-93), of North Aston, Oxon". History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 29 November 2017.

secretary, state, southern, department, secretaries, state, kingdom, england, before, restoration, secretary, state, england, position, cabinet, government, kingdom, great, britain, 1782, when, southern, department, became, home, office, great, britaincoat, ar. For Secretaries of State of the Kingdom of England before the Restoration see Secretary of State England The Secretary of State for the Southern Department 1 was a position in the cabinet of the government of the Kingdom of Great Britain up to 1782 when the Southern Department became the Home Office 2 3 Great BritainSecretary of State for the Southern DepartmentCoat of Arms of the Kingdom of Great Britain GovernmentThe Southern DepartmentStyleThe Right Honourable Formal prefix Member ofBritish CabinetSeatWestminster LondonAppointerThe British Monarchon advice of the Prime MinisterTerm lengthNo fixed termFormation1660 1782First holderEdward NicholasFinal holderWills Hill 1st Earl of Hillsborough Contents 1 History 2 List of Southern Secretaries 3 See also 4 Notes 5 CitationsHistory editBefore 1782 the responsibilities of the two British Secretaries of State for the Northern and the Southern departments were divided not based on the principles of modern ministerial divisions but geographically The Secretary of State for the Southern Department was responsible for Ireland the Channel Islands France Spain Portugal the Old Swiss Confederacy the states of Italy and the Ottoman Empire He was also responsible for the American colonies until 1768 when the charge was given to the Secretary of State for the Colonies The Secretary of State for the Northern Department was responsible for relations with the Dutch Republic Scandinavia Poland Russia and the Holy Roman Empire Domestic responsibilities in England and Wales were shared between the two Secretaries After the union with Scotland in 1707 the two secretaries also took responsibility for Scotland when there was no Secretary of State for Scotland in office 4 Until 1706 the practice was generally for the senior official to lead the Southern Department and the junior the Northern Department with the Northern Secretary being transferred to the Southern Department when a vacancy arose at the latter 4 During the reigns of George I and George II however the Northern Department began to be seen as the more important since its responsibilities included the monarchs ancestral home of Hanover 5 During the reign of George III the two departments were of approximately equal importance 6 In 1782 the two Secretaries of State were reformed as the Secretary of State for the Home Department and the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs 7 List of Southern Secretaries editSecretary of State for the Southern Department 8 9 Portrait Name Birth Death Term of office Monarch Reign Ref nbsp Sir Edward Nicholas 1593 1669 1 June1660 20 October1662 Charles II nbsp 1660 1685 10 nbsp Henry Bennet1st Earl of Arlington 1618 1685 a 20 October1662 11 September1674 11 nbsp Henry CoventryMP for Droitwich c 1618 1686 11 September1674 26 April1680 12 nbsp Robert Spencer2nd Earl of Sunderland 1641 1702 26 April1680 2 February1681 nbsp Sir Leoline JenkinsMP for Oxford University c 1625 1685 2 February1681 14 April1684 13 nbsp Robert Spencer2nd Earl of Sunderland 1641 1702 14 April1684 28 October1688James II nbsp 1685 1688 nbsp Charles Middleton2nd Earl of Middleton c 1650 1719 28 October1688 2 December1688 14 nbsp Charles Talbot12th Earl of Shrewsbury 1660 1718 14 February1689 2 June1690 Mary II nbsp 1689 1694 amp William III nbsp 1689 1702 nbsp Daniel Finch2nd Earl of Nottingham 1647 1730 b 2 June1690 November1693 15 nbsp Sir John TrenchardMP for Poole 1649 1695 c November1693 27 April1695 16 nbsp Charles Talbot1st Duke of Shrewsbury 1660 1718 27 April1695 12 December1698 nbsp James VernonMP for Westminster 1646 1727 d 12 December1698 14 May1699 17 nbsp Edward Villiers1st Earl of Jersey c 1656 1711 14 May1699 27 June1700 nbsp James VernonMP for Westminster 1646 1727 e 27 June1700 4 January1702 17 nbsp Charles Montagu4th Earl of Manchester c 1662 1722 4 January1702 1 May1702Anne nbsp 1702 1714 nbsp Daniel Finch2nd Earl of Nottingham 1647 1730 2 May1702 22 April1704 15 nbsp Sir Charles HedgesMP for West Looe 1650 1714 f 18 May1704 3 December1706 18 nbsp Charles Spencer3rd Earl of Sunderland 1675 1722 3 December1706 13 June1710 19 nbsp William Legge1st Earl of Dartmouth 1672 1750 15 June1710 6 August1713 nbsp Henry St John1st Viscount Bolingbroke 1678 1751 17 August1713 31 August1714 20 George I nbsp 1714 1727 nbsp James StanhopeMP for Cockermouth 1673 1721 g 27 September1714 22 June1716 21 nbsp Sir Paul MethuenMP for Brackley c 1672 1757 h 22 June1716 10 April1717 22 nbsp Joseph AddisonMP for Malmesbury 1672 1719 12 April1717 14 March1718 23 nbsp James Craggs the Younger MP for Tregony 1686 1721 16 March1718 16 February1721 24 nbsp John Carteret2nd Baron Carteret 1690 1763 4 March1721 31 March1724 nbsp Thomas Pelham Holles1st Duke of Newcastle 1693 1768 i 6 April1724 12 February1748George II nbsp 1727 1760 nbsp John Russell4th Duke of Bedford 1710 1771 12 February1748 13 June1751 nbsp Robert Darcy4th Earl of Holdernesse 1718 1778 18 June1751 23 March1754 nbsp Sir Thomas RobinsonMP for Christchurch 1695 1770 24 March1754 October1755 25 nbsp Henry FoxMP for Windsor 1705 1774 14 November1755 13 November1756 26 nbsp William Pitt the Elder MP for Okehampton 1708 1778 4 December1756 6 April1757 27 nbsp Robert Darcy4th Earl of Holdernesse 1718 1778 j 6 April1757 27 June1757 nbsp William Pitt the Elder MP for Bath 1708 1778 27 June1757 5 October1761 27 George III nbsp 1760 1820 nbsp Charles Wyndham2nd Earl of Egremont 1710 1763 9 October1761 21 August1763 28 nbsp George Montagu Dunk2nd Earl of Halifax 1716 1771 9 September1763 10 July1765 nbsp Henry Seymour ConwayMP for Thetford 1719 1795 12 July1765 23 May1766 29 nbsp Charles Lennox3rd Duke of Richmond 1735 1806 23 May1766 29 July1766 nbsp William Petty2nd Earl of Shelburne 1737 1805 30 July1766 20 October1768 30 nbsp Thomas Thynne3rd Viscount Weymouth 1734 1796 21 October1768 12 December1770 nbsp William de Zuylestein4th Earl of Rochford 1717 1781 19 December1770 9 November1775 nbsp Thomas Thynne3rd Viscount Weymouth 1734 1796 k 9 November1775 November1779 nbsp Wills Hill1st Earl of Hillsborough 1718 1793 25 November1779 27 March1782 31 See also editSecretary of State England Notes edit Returned as MP for Callington from 1661 to 1665 thereafter raised to the peerage of England as Baron Arlington and created Earl of Arlington in 1672 Served as sole Secretary of State from June to December 1690 again from March 1692 to March 1693 Served as sole Secretary of State from November to March 1694 Acting Secretary of State for the Southern Department Acting Secretary of State for the Southern Department from June to November 1700 official appointment from 5 November 1700 Returned as MP for Calne from 1702 to 1705 thereafter returned as MP for West Looe from 1705 to 1713 Returned as MP for Wendover from March 1715 to 1715 thereafter returned as MP for Cockermouth from 1715 to 1717 Acting Secretary of State for the Southern Department from May to December 1723 official appointment from 12 December 1716 In February 1746 John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville held office for two days however as the formalities of his appointment were not completed sources typically do not include him as a Southern Secretary Served as sole Secretary of State Served as sole Secretary of State from March to October 1799 Citations edit Constantine Stephen 2009 Community and Identity The Making of Modern Gibraltar Since 1704 Oxford University Press p 69 ISBN 9780719080548 FCO Historians April 1991 The FCO Policy People and Places 1782 1995 History Notes 2 Foreign and Commonwealth Office 1 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The National Archives catalogue Records assembled by the State Paper Office including papers of the Secretaries of State up to 1782 The National Archives a b Thomson Mark A 1932 The Secretaries of State 1681 1782 London Frank Cass pp 2 3 Cass 1932 pp 21 22 Cass 1932 p 4 Sainty J C 1973 Introduction Office Holders in Modern Britain Volume 2 Officials of the Secretaries of State 1660 1782 University of London pp 1 21 via British History Online At the Restoration in 1660 the practice of appointing two Secretaries of State which was well established before the Civil War was resumed Apart from the modifications which were made necessary by the occasional existence of a third secretaryship the organisation of the secretariat underwent no fundamental change from that time until the reforms of 1782 which resulted in the emergence of the Home and Foreign departments English domestic affairs remained the responsibility of both Secretaries throughout the period In the field of foreign affairs there was a division into a Northern and a Southern Department each of which was the responsibility of one Secretary The distinction between the two departments emerged only gradually It was not until after 1689 that their names passed into general currency Nevertheless the division of foreign business itself can in its broad outlines be detected in the early years of the reign of Charles II Sainty ed J C 1974 Office Holders in Modern Britain Volume 2 Officials of the Secretaries of State 1660 1782 University of London pp 22 58 Lists of appointments in Office Holders in Modern Britain Volume 2 Officials of the Secretaries of State 1660 1782 ed J C Sainty London 1973 pp 22 58 British History Online http www british history ac uk office holders vol2 pp22 58 accessed 18 July 2017 Baron Sabrina Alcorn Thrush Andrew NICHOLAS Edward 1593 1669 of Dover Castle Kent and King Street Westminster later of West Horsley Surr History of Parliament Online Retrieved 28 November 2017 Ferris John P BENNET Sir Henry 1618 85 History of Parliament Online Retrieved 28 November 2017 Rowlands Edward COVENTRY Hon Henry c 1618 86 of Piccadilly Hall The Haymarket Westminster and West Bailey Lodge Enfield Mdx History of Parliament Online Retrieved 28 November 2017 Henning Basil Duke JENKINS Sir Leoline c 1625 85 of Jesus College Oxford and Hammersmith Mdx History of Parliament Online Retrieved 28 November 2017 Henning Basil Duke MIDDLETON Charles 2nd Earl of Middleton S c 1650 1719 History of Parliament Online Retrieved 28 November 2017 a b Ferris John P FINCH Daniel 1647 1730 of Kensington Mdx and Milton Ernest Beds History of Parliament Online Retrieved 28 November 2017 Ferris John P TRENCHARD John 1649 95 of the Middle Temple History of Parliament Online Retrieved 28 November 2017 a b Ferris John P VERNON James 1646 1727 of Frith Street Westminster History of Parliament Online Retrieved 28 November 2017 Handley Stuart HEDGES Sir Charles 1650 1714 of Richmond Surr Compton Bassett Wilts and St James s Park Westminster History of Parliament Online Retrieved 30 November 2017 Handley Stuart SPENCER Charles Lord Spencer 1675 1722 History of Parliament Online Retrieved 3 December 2017 Handley Stuart ST JOHN Henry II 1678 1752 of Bucklebury Berks History of Parliament Online Retrieved 3 December 2017 Handley Stuart STANHOPE James 1673 1721 of London History of Parliament Online Retrieved 3 December 2017 Seghwick Romney R METHUEN Paul c 1672 1757 of Bishops Cannings Wilts History of Parliament Online Retrieved 30 November 2017 Lea R S ADDISON Joseph 1672 1719 of Bilton Warws and Holland House Kensington History of Parliament Online Retrieved 30 November 2017 Segwick Romney R CRAGGS James 1686 1721 History of Parliament Online Retrieved 30 November 2017 Sedgwick Romney R ROBINSON Thomas 1695 1770 of Newby Yorks History of Parliament Online Retrieved 3 December 2017 Namier Sir Lewis FOX Henry 1705 74 of Holland House Kensington History of Parliament Online Retrieved 3 December 2017 a b Brooke John PITT William 1708 78 of Hayes Kent History of Parliament Online Retrieved 3 December 2017 Cruickshanks Eveline WYNDHAM Charles 1710 63 of Orchard Wyndham Som History of Parliament Online Retrieved 2 December 2017 Brooke John CONWAY Hon Henry Seymour 1719 95 of Park Place Berks History of Parliament Online Retrieved 1 December 2017 Namier Sir Lewis PETTY William Visct Fitzmaurice 1737 1805 of Bowood Wilts History of Parliament Online Retrieved 2 December 2017 Brooke John HILL Wills 1st Earl of Hillsborough I 1718 93 of North Aston Oxon History of Parliament Online Retrieved 29 November 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Secretary of State for the Southern Department amp oldid 1188867964, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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