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William Pitt the Younger

William Pitt the Younger (28 May 1759 – 23 January 1806) was a British statesman, the youngest and last prime minister of Great Britain from 1783 until the Acts of Union 1800 and then first prime minister of the United Kingdom from January 1801. He left office in March 1801, but served as prime minister again from 1804 until his death in 1806. He was also Chancellor of the Exchequer for all of his time as prime minister. He is known as "Pitt the Younger" to distinguish him from his father, William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham, who had previously served as prime minister and is referred to as "William Pitt the Elder" (or "Chatham" by historians).

William Pitt
Portrait by John Hoppner, c. 1804–06
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office
10 May 1804 – 23 January 1806
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded byHenry Addington
Succeeded byThe Lord Grenville
In office
1 January 1801 – 14 March 1801
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded byHimself as Prime Minister of Great Britain
Succeeded byHenry Addington
Prime Minister of Great Britain
In office
19 December 1783 – 1 January 1801
MonarchGeorge III
Preceded byThe Duke of Portland
Succeeded by Himself as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
10 May 1804 – 23 January 1806
Preceded byHenry Addington
Succeeded byLord Henry Petty
In office
19 December 1783 – 14 March 1801
Preceded byLord John Cavendish
Succeeded byHenry Addington
In office
10 July 1782 – 31 March 1783
Preceded byLord John Cavendish
Succeeded byLord John Cavendish
Parliamentary offices
Leader of the House of Commons
In office
10 May 1804 – 23 January 1806
Preceded byHenry Addington
Succeeded byCharles James Fox
In office
19 December 1783 – 14 March 1801
Preceded byLord North
Succeeded byHenry Addington
Member of Parliament
for Cambridge University
In office
18 May 1784 – 23 January 1806
Preceded byLord John Townshend
Succeeded byLord Henry Petty
Member of Parliament
for Appleby
In office
8 January 1781 – 30 March 1784
Preceded byWilliam Lowther
Succeeded byJohn Leveson-Gower
Personal details
Born(1759-05-28)28 May 1759
Hayes, Kent, England
Died23 January 1806(1806-01-23) (aged 46)
Putney, England
Resting placeWestminster Abbey, England
Parent(s)William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham
Lady Hester Grenville
Alma materPembroke College, Cambridge
Signature
Military Service
AllegianceGreat Britain
Service/branchBritish Militia
Years of service1802-1804
RankColonel
UnitTrinity House Volunteer Artillery
Cinque Ports Volunteers
Battles/warsNapoleonic Wars
William Pitt by Joseph Nollekens, 1808
Statue of Pitt at Pembroke College, Cambridge, his alma mater
The huge monument to William Pitt the Younger by J. G. Bubb in the Guildhall, London, faces an equally huge monument to his father, William Pitt the Elder, in a balanced composition

Pitt's prime ministerial tenure, which came during the reign of King George III, was dominated by major political events in Europe, including the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars. Pitt, although often referred to as a Tory, or "new Tory", called himself an "independent Whig" and was generally opposed to the development of a strict partisan political system.

Pitt was regarded as an outstanding administrator who worked for efficiency and reform, bringing in a new generation of competent administrators. He increased taxes to pay for the great war against France and cracked down on radicalism. To engage the threat of Irish support for France, he engineered the Acts of Union 1800 and tried (but failed) to secure Catholic emancipation as part of the Union. He created the "new Toryism", which revived the Tory Party and enabled it to stay in power for the next quarter-century.

The historian Asa Briggs argues that his personality did not endear itself to the British mind, for Pitt was too solitary and too colourless, and too often exuded an attitude of superiority. His greatness came in the war with France. Pitt reacted to become what Lord Minto called "the Atlas of our reeling globe". William Wilberforce said, "For personal purity, disinterestedness and love of this country, I have never known his equal."[1] Historian Charles Petrie concludes that he was one of the greatest prime ministers "if on no other ground than that he enabled the country to pass from the old order to the new without any violent upheaval ... He understood the new Britain."[2] For this he is ranked highly amongst all British prime ministers in multiple surveys.[3][4]

Pitt served as prime minister for a total of eighteen years, 343 days, making him the second-longest serving British prime minister of all time, after Robert Walpole.

Early life edit

Family edit

William Pitt, the second son of William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham, was born on 28 May 1759 at Hayes Place in the village of Hayes, Kent.[5] He was from a political family on both sides, as his mother, Hester Grenville, was sister of former prime minister George Grenville.[6] According to biographer John Ehrman, Pitt exhibited the brilliance and dynamism of his father's line, and the determined, methodical nature of the Grenvilles.[7]

Education edit

Suffering from occasional poor health as a boy, he was educated at home by the Reverend Edward Wilson. An intelligent child, Pitt quickly became proficient in Latin and Greek. He was admitted to Pembroke College, Cambridge, on 26 April 1773,[8] a month before turning fourteen. He studied political philosophy, classics, mathematics, trigonometry, chemistry and history.[9] At Cambridge, Pitt was tutored by George Pretyman, who became a close personal friend. Pitt later appointed Pretyman Bishop of Lincoln, then Winchester, and drew upon his advice throughout his political career.[10] While at Cambridge, he befriended the young William Wilberforce, who became a lifelong friend and political ally in Parliament.[11] Pitt tended to socialise only with fellow students and others already known to him, rarely venturing outside the university grounds. Yet he was described as charming and friendly. According to Wilberforce, Pitt had an exceptional wit along with an endearingly gentle sense of humour: "no man ... ever indulged more freely or happily in that playful facetiousness which gratifies all without wounding any."[12]

In 1776, Pitt, plagued by poor health, took advantage of a little-used privilege available only to the sons of noblemen, and chose to graduate without having to pass examinations. Pitt's father was said to have demanded him to continually translate aloud classical literature into English and declaim upon previously unknown topics in effort to develop his oratory skills.[13] Pitt's father, who had by then been raised to the peerage as Earl of Chatham, died in 1778. As a younger son, Pitt the Younger received only a small inheritance. He acquired his legal education at Lincoln's Inn and was called to the bar in the summer of 1780.[14]

Early political career edit

Member of Parliament edit

During the general elections of September 1780, at the age of 21, Pitt contested the University of Cambridge seat, but lost.[15] Still intent on entering Parliament, Pitt secured the patronage of James Lowther, later 1st Earl Lowther, with the help of his university friend, Charles Manners, 4th Duke of Rutland. Lowther effectively controlled the pocket borough of Appleby; a by-election in that constituency sent Pitt to the House of Commons in January 1781.[16] Pitt's entry into parliament is somewhat ironic as he later railed against the very same pocket and rotten boroughs that had given him his seat.[17]

In Parliament, the youthful Pitt cast aside his tendency to be withdrawn in public, emerging as a noted debater right from his maiden speech.[18] Pitt originally aligned himself with prominent Whigs such as Charles James Fox. With the Whigs, Pitt denounced the continuation of the American War of Independence, as his father strongly had. Instead he proposed that the prime minister, Lord North, make peace with the rebellious American colonies. Pitt also supported parliamentary reform measures, including a proposal that would have checked electoral corruption. He renewed his friendship with William Wilberforce, now MP for Hull, with whom he frequently met in the gallery of the House of Commons.[19]

Chancellorship edit

After Lord North's ministry collapsed in 1782, the Whig Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham, was appointed prime minister. Pitt was offered the minor post of Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, but he refused, considering the post overly subordinate. Lord Rockingham died only three months after coming to power; he was succeeded by another Whig, William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne. Many Whigs who had formed a part of the Rockingham ministry, including Fox, now refused to serve under Lord Shelburne, the new prime minister. Pitt, however, was comfortable with Shelburne, and thus joined his government; he was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer.[20]

Fox, who became Pitt's lifelong political rival, then joined a coalition with Lord North, with whom he collaborated to bring about the defeat of the Shelburne administration. When Lord Shelburne resigned in 1783, King George III, who despised Fox, offered to appoint Pitt to the office of Prime Minister. But Pitt wisely declined, for he knew he would be incapable of securing the support of the House of Commons. The Fox–North coalition rose to power in a government nominally headed by William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland.[21]

Pitt, who had been stripped of his post as Chancellor of the Exchequer, joined the Opposition. He raised the issue of parliamentary reform in order to strain the uneasy Fox-North coalition, which included both supporters and detractors of reform. He did not advocate an expansion of the electoral franchise, but he did seek to address bribery and rotten boroughs. Though his proposal failed, many reformers in Parliament came to regard him as their leader, instead of Charles James Fox.

Effects of the American War of Independence edit

Losing the war and the Thirteen Colonies was a shock to the British system. The war revealed the limitations of Britain's fiscal-military state when it had powerful enemies and no allies, depended on extended and vulnerable transatlantic lines of communication, and was faced for the first time since the 17th century by both Protestant and Catholic foes. The defeat heightened dissension and escalated political antagonism to the King's ministers. Inside parliament, the primary concern changed from fears of an over-mighty monarch to the issues of representation, parliamentary reform, and government retrenchment. Reformers sought to destroy what they saw as widespread institutional corruption. The result was a crisis from 1776 to 1783. The peace in 1783 left France financially prostrate, while the British economy boomed due to the return of American business. That crisis ended in 1784 as a result of the King's shrewdness in outwitting Fox[further explanation needed] and renewed confidence in the system engendered by the leadership of Pitt. Historians conclude that the loss of the American colonies enabled Britain to deal with the French Revolution with more unity and organisation than would otherwise have been the case.[22][page needed] Britain turned towards Asia, the Pacific, and later Africa with subsequent exploration leading to the rise of the Second British Empire.[23]

First Premiership edit

Rise to power edit

The Fox-North Coalition fell in December 1783, after Fox had introduced Edmund Burke's bill to reform the East India Company to gain the patronage he so greatly lacked while the King refused to support him. Fox stated the bill was necessary to save the company from bankruptcy. Pitt responded that: "Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves."[24] The King was opposed to the bill; when it passed in the House of Commons, he secured its defeat in the House of Lords by threatening to regard anyone who voted for it as his enemy. Following the bill's failure in the Upper House, George III dismissed the coalition government and finally entrusted the premiership to William Pitt, after having offered the position to him three times previously.[25]

Appointment edit

A constitutional crisis arose when the King dismissed the Fox-North coalition government and named Pitt to replace it. Though faced with a hostile majority in Parliament, Pitt was able to solidify his position within a few months. Some historians argue that his success was inevitable given the decisive importance of monarchical power; others argue that the King gambled on Pitt and that both would have failed but for a run of good fortune.[26]

Pitt, at the age of 24, became Great Britain's youngest Prime Minister ever. The contemporary satire The Rolliad ridiculed him for his youth:[27]

Above the rest, majestically great,
Behold the infant Atlas of the state,
The matchless miracle of modern days,
In whom Britannia to the world displays
A sight to make surrounding nations stare;
A kingdom trusted to a school-boy's care.

Many saw Pitt as a stop-gap appointment until some more senior statesman took on the role. However, although it was widely predicted that the new "mince-pie administration" would not outlast the Christmas season,[28] it survived for seventeen years.[29]

So as to reduce the power of the Opposition, Pitt offered Charles James Fox and his allies posts in the Cabinet; Pitt's refusal to include Lord North, however, thwarted his efforts. The new government was immediately on the defensive and in January 1784 was defeated on a motion of no confidence. Pitt, however, took the unprecedented step of refusing to resign, despite this defeat. He retained the support of the King, who would not entrust the reins of power to the Fox–North Coalition. He also received the support of the House of Lords, which passed supportive motions, and many messages of support from the country at large, in the form of petitions approving of his appointment which influenced some Members to switch their support to Pitt. At the same time, he was granted the Freedom of the City of London. When he returned from the ceremony to mark this, men of the City pulled Pitt's coach home themselves, as a sign of respect. When passing a Whig club, the coach came under attack from a group of men who tried to assault Pitt. When news of this spread, it was assumed Fox and his associates had tried to bring down Pitt by any means.[30]

Electoral victory edit

 
William Pitt in 1783, by George Romney

Pitt gained great popularity with the public at large as "Honest Billy" who was seen as a refreshing change from the dishonesty, corruption and lack of principles widely associated with both Fox and North. Despite a series of defeats in the House of Commons, Pitt defiantly remained in office, watching the Coalition's majority shrink as some Members of Parliament left the Opposition to abstain.[30]

In March 1784, Parliament was dissolved, and a general election ensued. An electoral defeat for the government was out of the question because Pitt enjoyed the support of King George III. Patronage and bribes paid by the Treasury were normally expected to be enough to secure the government a comfortable majority in the House of Commons, but on this occasion, the government reaped much popular support as well.[31] In most popular constituencies, the election was fought between candidates clearly representing either Pitt or Fox and North. Early returns showed a massive swing to Pitt with the result that many Opposition Members who still had not faced election either defected, stood down, or made deals with their opponents to avoid expensive defeats.[32]

A notable exception came in Fox's own constituency of Westminster, which contained one of the largest electorates in the country. In a contest estimated to have cost a quarter of the total spending in the entire country, Fox bitterly fought against two Pittite candidates to secure one of the two seats for the constituency. Great legal wranglings ensued, including the examination of every single vote cast, which dragged on for more than a year. Meanwhile, Fox sat for the pocket borough of Tain Burghs. Many saw the dragging out of the result as being unduly vindictive on the part of Pitt and eventually the examinations were abandoned with Fox declared elected. Elsewhere, Pitt won a personal triumph when he was elected a Member for the University of Cambridge, a constituency he had long coveted and which he would continue to represent for the remainder of his life.[32]

First government edit

In domestic politics, Pitt concerned himself with the cause of parliamentary reform. In 1785, he introduced a bill to remove the representation of thirty-six rotten boroughs, and to extend, in a small way, the electoral franchise to more individuals.[33] Pitt's support for the bill, however, was not strong enough to prevent its defeat in the House of Commons.[34] The bill of 1785 was the last parliamentary reform proposal introduced by Pitt to British legislators.

Colonial reform edit

 
The fall of Tipu Sultan and the Sultanate of Mysore in 1799

His administration secure, Pitt could begin to enact his agenda. His first major piece of legislation as prime minister was the India Act 1784, which re-organised the British East India Company and kept a watch over corruption. The India Act created a new Board of Control to oversee the affairs of the East India Company. It differed from Fox's failed India Bill 1783 and specified that the board would be appointed by the king.[35] Pitt was appointed, along with Lord Sydney, who was appointed President.[35] The act centralised British rule in India by reducing the power of the governors of Bombay and Madras and by increasing that of Governor-General Charles Cornwallis. Further augmentations and clarifications of the governor-general's authority were made in 1786, presumably by Lord Sydney, and presumably as a result of the company's setting up of Penang with their own superintendent (governor), Captain Francis Light, in 1786.

Convicts were originally transported to the Thirteen Colonies in North America, but after the American War of Independence ended in 1783, the newly formed United States refused to accept further convicts.[36] Pitt's government took the decision to settle what is now Australia and found the penal colony in August 1786. The First Fleet of 11 vessels carried over a thousand settlers, including 778 convicts. The Colony of New South Wales was formally proclaimed by Governor Arthur Phillip on 7 February 1788 at Sydney.[37]

Finances edit

 
In "A new way to pay the National Debt" (1786), James Gillray caricatured Queen Charlotte and George III awash with treasury funds to cover royal debts, with Pitt handing them another moneybag.

Another important domestic issue with which Pitt had to concern himself was the national debt, which had doubled to £243 million during the American war.[a] Every year, a third of the budget of £24 million went to pay interest. Pitt sought to reduce the national debt by imposing new taxes. In 1786, he instituted a sinking fund so that £1 million a year was added to a fund so that it could accumulate interest; eventually, the money in the fund was to be used to pay off the national debt. By 1792, the debt had fallen to £170 million.[38][b]

Pitt always paid careful attention to financial issues. A fifth of Britain's imports were smuggled in without paying taxes. He made it easier for honest merchants to import goods by lowering tariffs on easily smuggled items such as tea, wine, spirits, and tobacco. This policy raised customs revenues by nearly £2 million a year.[39][40][c]

In 1797, Pitt was forced to protect the kingdom's gold reserves by preventing individuals from exchanging banknotes for gold. Great Britain would continue to use paper money for over two decades. Pitt was also forced to introduce Great Britain's first-ever income tax. The new tax helped offset losses in indirect tax revenue, which had been caused by a decline in trade.[41]

Foreign affairs edit

Pitt sought European alliances to restrict French influence, forming the Triple Alliance with Prussia and Holland in 1788.[42] During the Nootka Sound Controversy in 1790, Pitt took advantage of the alliance to force Spain to give up its claim to exclusive control over the western coast of North and South America. The Alliance, however, failed to produce any other important benefits for Great Britain.[43]

Pitt was alarmed at Russian expansion in the 1780s at the expense of the Ottoman Empire.[44] The relations between Russia and Britain were disturbed during the Russo-Turkish War of 1787–1792 by Pitt's subscription to the view of the Prussian government that the Triple Alliance could not with impunity allow the balance of power in Eastern Europe to be disturbed. In peace talks with the Ottomans, Russia refused to return the key Ochakov fortress. Pitt wanted to threaten military retaliation. However Russia's ambassador Semyon Vorontsov organised Pitt's enemies and launched a public opinion campaign. Pitt had become alarmed at the opposition to his Russian policy in parliament, Burke and Fox both uttering powerful speeches against the restoration of Ochakov to the Turks. Pitt won the vote so narrowly that he gave up.[45][46] The outbreak of the French Revolution and its attendant wars temporarily united Britain and Russia in an ideological alliance against French republicanism.

The King's condition edit

In 1788, Pitt faced a major crisis when the King fell victim to a mysterious illness,[d] a form of mental disorder that incapacitated him. If the sovereign was incapable of fulfilling his constitutional duties, Parliament would need to appoint a regent to rule in his place. All factions agreed that the only viable candidate was the King's eldest son and heir apparent, George, Prince of Wales. The Prince, however, was a supporter of Charles James Fox. Had the Prince come to power, he would almost surely have dismissed Pitt. He did not have such an opportunity, however, as Parliament spent months debating legal technicalities relating to the regency. Fortunately for Pitt, the King recovered in February 1789, just after a Regency Bill had been introduced and passed in the House of Commons.[47]

The general elections of 1790 resulted in a majority for the government, and Pitt continued as prime minister. In 1791, he proceeded to address one of the problems facing the growing British Empire: the future of British Canada. By the Constitutional Act of 1791, the province of Quebec was divided into two separate provinces: the predominantly French Lower Canada and the predominantly English Upper Canada. In August 1792, coincident with the capture of Louis XVI by the French revolutionaries, George III appointed Pitt as Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, a position whose incumbent was responsible for the coastal defences of the realm.[48] The King had in 1791 offered him a Knighthood of the Garter, but he suggested the honour go to his elder brother, the second Earl of Chatham.[48]

French Revolution edit

 
Pitt (standing centre) addressing the Commons on the outbreak of the war with France (1793); painting by Anton Hickel

An early favourable response to the French Revolution encouraged many in Great Britain to reopen the issue of parliamentary reform, which had been dormant since Pitt's reform bill was defeated in 1785. The reformers, however, were quickly labelled as radicals and associates of the French revolutionaries. Subsequently, in 1794, Pitt's administration tried three of them for treason but lost. Parliament began to enact repressive legislation in order to silence the reformers. Individuals who published seditious material were punished, and, in 1794, the writ of habeas corpus was suspended. Other repressive measures included the Seditious Meetings Act 1795, which restricted the right of individuals to assemble publicly, and the Combination Acts, which restricted the formation of societies or organisations that favoured political reforms. Problems manning the Royal Navy also led to Pitt to introduce the Quota System in 1795 in addition to the existing system of impressment.[49]

The war with France was extremely expensive, straining Great Britain's finances. Unlike in the latter stages of the Napoleonic Wars, at this point Britain had only a very small standing army, and thus contributed to the war effort mainly through sea power and by supplying funds to other coalition members facing France.

Ideological struggle edit

 
William Pitt by Gainsborough Dupont in the Burrell Collection, Glasgow

Throughout the 1790s, the war against France was presented as an ideological struggle between French republicanism vs. British monarchism with the British government seeking to mobilise public opinion in support of the war.[50] The Pitt government waged a vigorous propaganda campaign contrasting the ordered society of Britain dominated by the aristocracy and the gentry vs. the "anarchy" of the French revolution and always sought to associate British "radicals" with the revolution in France.[51] Though the Pitt government did drastically reduce civil liberties and created a nationwide spy network with ordinary people being encouraged to denounce any "radicals" that might be in their midst, the historian Eric J. Evans argued the picture of Pitt's "reign of terror" as portrayed by the Marxist historian E.P. Thompson is incorrect, stating there is much evidence of a "popular conservative movement" that rallied in defence of King and Country.[52] Evans wrote that there were about 200 prosecutions of "radicals" suspected of sympathy with the French revolution in British courts in the 1790s, which was much less than the prosecutions of suspected Jacobites after the rebellions of 1715 and 1745.[51] However, the spy network maintained by the government was efficient. In Jane Austen's novel Northanger Abbey, which was written in the 1790s, but not published until 1817, one of the characters remarks that it is not possible for a family to keep secrets in these modern times when spies for the government were lurking everywhere. This comment captures well the tense, paranoid atmosphere of the 1790s, when people were being encouraged to report "radicals" to the authorities.[53]

Haiti edit

 
European colonies in the Caribbean in 1794

In 1793, Pitt decided to take advantage of the Haitian Revolution to seize St. Domingue, the richest French colony in the world, believing this would strike a great blow at France while bringing St. Domingue into the British Empire and ensuring that the slaves in the British West Indies would not be inspired to revolt likewise.[54] Many of those who owned slave plantations in the British West Indies had been greatly alarmed by the revolution, which began in 1791, and they were strongly pressing Pitt to restore slavery in St. Domingue, lest their own slaves be inspired to seek freedom.[55] Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville, who was Pitt's Secretary of State for War, instructed Sir Adam Williamson, the lieutenant-governor of Jamaica, to sign an agreement with representatives of the French colonists that promised to restore the ancien regime, slavery, and discrimination against mixed-race colonists, a move that drew criticism from abolitionists William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson.[56][57]

The British landed in St. Domingue on 20 September 1793, stating they had come to protect the white population from the blacks, and were able to seize some coastal enclaves.[58] The fact that the British had come to restore slavery in St. Domingue inspired ferocious resistance from the Haitians, who had no desire to be forced into chains again. The heavy death toll caused by yellow fever, the much dreaded "black vomit", made conquering St. Domingue impossible, but an undeterred Pitt launched what he called the "great push" in 1795, sending out an even larger British expedition.[59]

In November 1795, some 218 ships left Portsmouth for St. Domingue.[60] After the failure of the Quiberon expedition earlier in 1795, when the British landed a force of French royalists on the coast of France who were annihilated by the forces of the republic, Pitt had decided it was crucial for Britain to have St. Domingue, no matter what the cost in lives and money, to improve Britain's negotiating hand when it came time to make peace with the French republic.[61] The British historian Michael Duffy argued that since Pitt committed far more manpower and money to the Caribbean expeditions, especially the one to St. Domingue, than he ever did to Europe in the years 1793–1798, it is proper to view the West Indies as Britain's main theatre of war and Europe as more of a sideshow.[62] By 1795, 50% of the British Army was deployed in the West Indies (with the largest contingent in St. Domingue), whereas the rest of the British Army was divided among Britain, Europe, India, and North America.[63]

As the British death toll, largely caused by yellow fever, continued to climb, Pitt was criticised in the House of Commons. Several MPs suggested it might be better to abandon the expedition, but Pitt insisted that Britain had given its word of honour that it would protect the French planters from their former slaves, and the expedition to St. Domingue could not be abandoned.[64] The British attempt to conquer St. Domingue in 1793 ended in disaster; the British pulled out on 31 August 1798 after having spent 4 million pounds (roughly £400.00 million in 2019[65]) and having lost about 100,000 men − dead or crippled for life, mostly from disease – over the preceding five years.[66] The British historian Sir John William Fortescue wrote that Pitt and his cabinet had tried to destroy French power "in these pestilent islands ... only to discover, when it was too late, that they practically destroyed the British army".[59] Fortescue concluded that Pitt's attempt to add St. Domingue to the British empire had killed off most of the British army, cost the British treasury a fortune and weakened British influence in Europe, making British power "fettered, numbered and paralyzed", all for nothing.[67]

Ireland edit

In May 1798, the long-simmering unrest in Ireland exploded into outright rebellion with the United Irishmen Society launching a revolt to win independence for Ireland.[68] Pitt took an extremely repressive approach to the United Irishmen with the Crown executing about 1,500 United Irishmen after the revolt.[68] The revolt of 1798 destroyed Pitt's faith in the governing competence of the Dublin parliament (dominated by Protestant Ascendancy families). Thinking a less sectarian and more conciliatory approach would have avoided the uprising, Pitt sought an Act of Union that would make Ireland an official part of the United Kingdom and end the "Irish Question".[69] The French expeditions to Ireland in 1796 and 1798 (to support the United Irishmen) were regarded by Pitt as near-misses that might have provided an Irish base for French attacks on Britain, thus making the "Irish Question" a national security matter.[69] As the Dublin parliament did not wish to disband, Pitt made generous use of what would now be called "pork barrel politics" to bribe Irish MPs to vote for the Act of Union.[70]

 
Irish Rebellion of 1798

Throughout the 1790s, the popularity of the Society of United Irishmen grew. Influenced by the American and French revolutions, this movement demanded independence and republicanism for Ireland.[71] The United Irishmen Society was very anti-clerical, being equally opposed to the "superstitions" promoted by both the Church of England and the Roman Catholic church, which caused the latter to support the Crown.[72] Realising that the Catholic church was an ally in the struggle against the French revolution, Pitt had tried fruitlessly to persuade the Dublin parliament to loosen the anti-Catholic laws to "keep things quiet in Ireland".[73] Pitt's efforts to soften the anti-Catholic laws failed in the face of determined resistance from the families of the Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland, who forced Pitt to recall Earl Fitzwilliam as Chief Secretary for Ireland in 1795, when the latter had indicated he would support a bill for Catholic relief.[74] In much of rural Ireland, law and order had broken down as an economic crisis further impoverished the already poor Irish peasantry, and a sectarian war with many atrocities on both sides had begun in 1793 between Catholic "Defenders" versus Protestant "Peep o' Day Boys".[71] A section of the Peep o'Day Boys who had renamed themselves the Loyal Orange Order in September 1795 were fanatically committed to upholding Protestant supremacy in Ireland at "almost any cost".[71] In December 1796, a French invasion of Ireland led by General Lazare Hoche (scheduled to coordinate with a rising of the United Irishmen) was only thwarted by bad weather.[71] To crush the United Irishmen, Pitt sent General Lake to Ulster in 1797 to call out Protestant Irish militiamen and organised an intelligence network of spies and informers.[71]

Spithead mutiny edit

In April 1797, the mutiny of the entire Spithead fleet shook the government (sailors demanded a pay increase to match inflation). This mutiny occurred at the same moment that the Franco-Dutch alliance were preparing an invasion of Britain. To regain control of the fleet, Pitt agreed to navy pay increases and had George III pardon the mutineers.[citation needed] By contrast, the more political "floating republic" naval mutiny at the Nore in June 1797 led by Richard Parker was handled more repressively. Pitt refused to negotiate with Parker, whom he wanted to see hanged as a mutineer.[citation needed] In response to the 1797 mutinies, Pitt passed the Incitement to Mutiny Act 1797 making it unlawful to advocate breaking oaths to the Crown. In 1798, he passed the Defence of the Realm act, which further restricted civil liberties.[50]

Failure edit

Despite Pitt's efforts, the French continued to defeat the First Coalition, which collapsed in 1798. A Second Coalition, consisting of Great Britain, Austria, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire, was formed, but it, too, failed to overcome the French. The fall of the Second Coalition with the defeat of the Austrians at the Battle of Marengo (14 June 1800) and at the Battle of Hohenlinden (3 December 1800) left Great Britain facing France alone.

Resignation edit

 
James Gillray caricatured Pitt's resignation in Integrity retiring from Office! (1801).

Following the Acts of Union 1800, Pitt sought to inaugurate the new United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland by granting concessions to Roman Catholics, who formed a 75% majority of the population in Ireland, by abolishing various political restrictions under which they suffered. The king was strongly opposed to Catholic emancipation; he argued that to grant additional liberty would violate his coronation oath, in which he had promised to protect the established Church of England. Pitt, unable to change the king's strong views, resigned on 16 February 1801,[75] so as to allow Henry Addington, his political friend, to form a new administration. At about the same time, however, the king suffered a renewed bout of madness, with the consequence that Addington could not receive his formal appointment. Though he had resigned, Pitt temporarily continued to discharge his duties; on 18 February 1801, he brought forward the annual budget. Power was transferred from Pitt to Addington on 14 March, when the king recovered.[76]

In Opposition edit

Shortly after leaving office, Pitt supported the new administration under Addington, but with little enthusiasm; he frequently absented himself from Parliament, preferring to remain in his Lord Warden's residence of Walmer Castle – before 1802 usually spending an annual late-summer holiday there, and later often present from the spring until the autumn.

 
In Britannia between Death and the Doctor's (1804), Gillray caricatured Pitt as a doctor kicking Addington (the previous doctor) out of Britannia's sickroom.

From the castle, he helped organise a local Volunteer Corps in anticipation of a French invasion, acted as colonel of a battalion raised by Trinity House – he was also a Master of Trinity House – and encouraged the construction of Martello towers and the Royal Military Canal in Romney Marsh. He rented land abutting the Castle to farm on which to lay out trees and walks. His niece Lady Hester Stanhope designed and managed the gardens and acted as his hostess.

The Treaty of Amiens in 1802 between France and Britain marked the end of the French Revolutionary Wars. Everyone expected it to be only a short truce. By 1803, war had broken out again with France under Napoleon Bonaparte. Although Addington had previously invited him to join the Cabinet, Pitt preferred to join the Opposition, becoming increasingly critical of the government's policies. Addington, unable to face the combined opposition of Pitt and Fox, saw his majority gradually evaporate and resigned in late April 1804.[77]

Second Premiership edit

Reappointment edit

 
In Uncorking Old Sherry (1805), Gillray caricatured Pitt uncorking a bottle of Sheridan that is bursting out with puns and invective.

Pitt finally returned to the premiership on 10 May 1804. He had originally planned to form a broad coalition government, with both the Tories and Whigs under one government.[78] But Pitt faced the opposition of George III to the inclusion of Fox, due to the King's dislike. Moreover, many of Pitt's former supporters, including the allies of Addington, joined the Opposition. Thus, Pitt's second ministry was considerably weaker than his first.[79]

Nevertheless, Pitt formed a second government which consisted of largely Tory members with some former ministers of the previous ministry. These include Lord Eldon as Lord High Chancellor, former Foreign Secretary Lord Hawkesbury as Home Secretary, Lord Harrowby as Foreign Secretary, former Prime Ministers Duke of Portland and Addington as Lord Privy Seal and Lord President of the Council, with Pitt's prominent allies the Viscount Melville and Lord Castlereagh as First Lord of the Admiralty and Secretary of State for the Colonies respectively..[78]

Second government edit

Resuming war edit

By the time Pitt became prime minister in 1804, the war in Europe has been escalating for sometime since the peace of Amiens in 1801 and in 1803 War of the Third Coalition begin[78] Pitt's new government resumed the war effort yet again to confront the French and to defeat Napoleon. Pitt initially allied Britain with Austria, Prussia and Russia with its former allies Austria Prussia and Russia against Napoleonic France and its allies.

The British government began placing pressure on the French Emperor, Napoleon I. By imposing sanctions, putting up a blockade across the English Channel and undermining French naval activities, Pitt's efforts proved a success and thanks to his efforts, the United Kingdom joined the Third Coalition, an alliance that included Austria, Russia, and Sweden.[78] In October 1805, the British Admiral Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson, won a crushing victory in the Battle of Trafalgar, ensuring British naval supremacy for the remainder of the war. At the annual Lord Mayor's Banquet toasting him as "the Saviour of Europe", Pitt responded in a few words that became the most famous speech of his life:

I return you many thanks for the honour you have done me; but Europe is not to be saved by any single man. England has saved herself by her exertions, and will, as I trust, save Europe by her example.[80]

Nevertheless, the Coalition collapsed, having suffered significant defeats at the Battle of Ulm (October 1805) and the Battle of Austerlitz (December 1805). After hearing the news of Austerlitz Pitt referred to a map of Europe, "Roll up that map; it will not be wanted these ten years."[81]

Finances edit

Pitt was an expert in finance and served as chancellor of the exchequer.[82] Critical to his success in confronting Napoleon was using Britain's superior economic resources. He was able to mobilize the nation's industrial and financial resources and apply them to defeating France.

With a population of 16 million, the United Kingdom was barely half the size of France, which had a population of 30 million. In terms of soldiers, however, the French numerical advantage was offset by British subsidies that paid for a large proportion of the Austrian and Russian soldiers, peaking at about 450,000 in 1813.[83]

Britain used its economic power to expand the Royal Navy, doubling the number of frigates and increasing the number of the larger ships of the line by 50%, while increasing the roster of sailors from 15,000 to 133,000 in eight years after the war began in 1793. The British national output remained strong, and the well-organized business sector channelled products into what the military needed. France, meanwhile, saw its navy shrink by more than half.[84] The system of smuggling finished products into the continent undermined French efforts to ruin the British economy by cutting off markets.

By 1814, the budget that Pitt in his last years had largely shaped had expanded to £66 million,[e] including £10 million for the Navy, £40 million for the Army, £10 million for the Allies, and £38 million as interest on the national debt. The national debt soared to £679 million,[f] more than double the GDP. It was willingly supported by hundreds of thousands of investors and tax payers, despite the higher taxes on land and a new income tax.[85]

The whole cost of the war came to £831 million. The French financial system was inadequate and Napoleon's forces had to rely in part on requisitions from conquered lands.[86][87][88]

 
Pitt's monument over the west door of Westminster Abbey, sculpted by Richard Westmacott.

Death edit

The setbacks took a toll on Pitt's health. He had long suffered from poor health, beginning in childhood, and was plagued with gout and "biliousness", which was worsened by a fondness for port that began when he was advised to consume it to deal with his chronic ill-health.[89] On 23 January 1806, Pitt died at Bowling Green House on Putney Heath, probably from peptic ulceration of his stomach or duodenum; he was unmarried and left no children.[90][91]

Pitt's debts amounted to £40,000 when he died, but Parliament agreed to pay them on his behalf.[92][93] A motion was made to honour him with a public funeral and a monument; it passed despite some opposition. Pitt's body was buried in Westminster Abbey on 22 February, having lain in state for two days in the Palace of Westminster.[94]

Pitt was succeeded as Prime Minister by his first cousin William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville, who headed the Ministry of All the Talents, a coalition which included Charles James Fox.[95]

Personal life edit

 
Arms of William Pitt the Younger

Pitt became known as a "three-bottle man" in reference to his heavy consumption of port wine. Each of these bottles would be around 350 millilitres (12 US fl oz) in volume.[96]

At one point rumours emerged of an intended marriage to Eleanor Eden, to whom Pitt had grown close. Pitt broke off the potential marriage in 1797, writing to her father, Lord Auckland, "I am compelled to say that I find the obstacles to it decisive and insurmountable".[96]

Of his social relationships, biographer William Hague writes:

Pitt was happiest among his Cambridge companions or family. He had no social ambitions, and it was rare for him to set out to make a friend. The talented collaborators of his first 18 months in office—Beresford, Wyvil and Twining—passed in and out of his mind along with their areas of expertise. Pitt's lack of interest in enlarging his social circle meant that it did not grow to encompass any women outside his own family, a fact that produced a good deal of rumour. From late 1784, a series of satirical verses appeared in The Morning Herald drawing attention to Pitt's lack of knowledge of women: "Tis true, indeed, we oft abuse him,/Because he bends to no man;/But slander's self dares not accuse him/Of stiffness to a woman." Others made snide references to Pitt's friendship with Tom Steele, Secretary to the Treasury. At the height of the constitutional crisis in 1784, Sheridan had compared Pitt to James I's favourite, the Duke of Buckingham, a clear reference to homosexuality. Socially, Pitt preferred the company of young men, and would continue to do so into his thirties and forties. It may be that Pitt had homosexual leanings but suppressed any urge to act on them for the sake of his ambitions. He could be charming to women, but it seems certain that he rejected intimacy whenever it was proffered—and would do so publicly at a later date. In practical terms it appears that Pitt was essentially asexual throughout his life.[96]

Legacy edit

 
Marble bust of William Pitt by Joseph Nollekens, 1807. Yale Center for British Art

William Pitt the Younger was a prime minister who consolidated the powers of his office. Though he was sometimes opposed by members of his Cabinet, he helped define the role of the Prime Minister as the supervisor and co-ordinator of the various government departments. After his death the conservatives embraced him as a great patriotic hero.[97]

One of Pitt's accomplishments was a rehabilitation of the nation's finances after the American War of Independence.[98] Pitt made changes to the tax system in order to improve its capture of revenue, which helped manage the mounting national debt.[98]

Some of Pitt's domestic plans were not successful; he failed to secure parliamentary reform, emancipation, or the abolition of the slave trade although this last took place with the Slave Trade Act 1807, the year after his death. The 1792 Slave Trade Bill passed the House of Commons mangled and mutilated by the modifications and amendments of Pitt, it lay for years, in the House of Lords.[99][100] Biographer William Hague considers the unfinished abolition of the slave trade to be Pitt's greatest failure.[101] He notes that by the end of Pitt's career, conditions were in place that would have allowed a skillful attempt to pass an abolition bill to succeed, partly because of the long campaigning Pitt had encouraged with his friend William Wilberforce. Hague goes on to note that the failure was likely due to Pitt being a "spent force" by the time favourable conditions had arisen. In Hague's opinion, Pitt's long premiership, "tested the natural limits of how long it is possible to be at the top. From 1783 to 1792, he faced each fresh challenge with brilliance; from 1793 he showed determination but sometimes faltered; and from 1804 he was worn down by ... the combination of a narrow majority and war".[102]

 
Statue in George Street, Edinburgh

Historian Marie Peters has compared his strengths and weaknesses with his father:

Having some of his father's volatility and much of the self-confidence bordering on arrogance, the younger Pitt inherited superb and carefully nurtured oratorical gifts. These gave him, like his father, unsurpassed command of the Commons and power to embody the national will in wartime. There were, however, significant differences. The younger Pitt's eloquence, unlike his father's, included the force of sustained reasoned exposition. This was perhaps in part expression of his thoroughly professional approach to politics, so unlike his father's, but possibly deriving something from Shelburne. The younger Pitt was continuously engaged in depth with major issues of his day. He regularly and energetically sought the best information. He was genuinely progressive, as his father was not, on parliamentary reform, Catholic emancipation, commercial policy, and administrative reform. His constructive capacity in his chief responsibility, financial policy and administration, far surpassed his father's record, if it was less impressive and perhaps more equally matched in foreign and imperial policy and strategy. With good reason, his long career in high office was the mirror image of his father's short tenure. In contrast, only briefly was Chatham able to rise to the challenge of his age. By his last decade time had passed him by.[103]

Cultural references edit

Film and television edit

William Pitt is depicted in several films and television programs.

  • Robert Donat portrays Pitt in the 1942 biopic The Young Mr. Pitt, which chronicles the historical events of Pitt's life.
  • Pitt's attempts during his tenure as Prime Minister to cope with the dementia of King George III are portrayed by Julian Wadham in the 1994 film The Madness of King George.
  • The 2006 film Amazing Grace, with Benedict Cumberbatch in the role of Pitt, depicts his close friendship with William Wilberforce, the leading abolitionist in Parliament.[104]
  • Pitt is caricatured as a boy prime minister in the third series of the television comedy Blackadder, in which Simon Osborne plays a fictionalised Pitt as a petulant teenager who has just come to power "right in the middle of [his] exams" in the episode Dish and Dishonesty. A fictionalised younger brother, "Pitt the Even Younger", appeared as a candidate standing in the Dunny-on-the-Wold by-election.
  • In the series of prime ministerial biographies Number 10, produced by Yorkshire Television, Pitt was portrayed by Jeremy Brett.
  • In the first episode of the 2016 ITV TV series Victoria, written by Daisy Goodwin, Lord Melbourne cites Pitt the Younger becoming Prime Minister at 24 as a reason why youth should not disqualify the 18-year-old Queen Victoria from ruling Britain.

Places named after him edit

Note, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was named for his father, William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham.[108]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ about £33 billion today
  2. ^ about £19 billion today
  3. ^ about £269 million today
  4. ^ The consensus view among historians is that the King was suffering from the blood disorder porphyria, which was unknown at this time. If protracted and untreated, it has serious mentally debilitating effects.
  5. ^ about £4 billion today
  6. ^ about £46 billion today

References edit

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  2. ^ Charles Petrie, "The Bicentenary of the Younger Pitt", Quarterly Review, 1959, Vol. 297 Issue 621, pp 254–265
  3. ^ Strangio, Hart & Walter 2013, p. 225.
  4. ^ Wise, Hansen & Egan 2005, p. 298.
  5. ^ Hague 2005, p. 14.
  6. ^ Hague 2005, p. 19.
  7. ^ Ehrman 1969, p. 4, Vol. 1.
  8. ^ "Pitt, the Hon. William (PT773W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
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  11. ^ "History – William Wilberforce (1759–1833)". BBC. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
  12. ^ Hague 2005, p. 30.
  13. ^ Halcombe 1859, p. 110.
  14. ^ Hague 2005, p. 46.
  15. ^ "William Pitt, the Younger: Historical importance". Britannica Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved 23 April 2010.
  16. ^ . 10 Downing Street – PMs in history. Archived from the original on 7 August 2008. Retrieved 23 April 2010.
  17. ^ Hague 2005, p. 89.
  18. ^ Hague 2005, pp. 62–65.
  19. ^ Hague 2005, p. 71.
  20. ^ Hague 2005, p. 99.
  21. ^ Hague 2005, p. 124.
  22. ^ Black 2006.
  23. ^ Canny 1998, p. 92.
  24. ^ Hague 2005, p. 140.
  25. ^ Hague 2005, p. 146.
  26. ^ Paul Kelly, "British Politics, 1783-4: The Emergence and Triumph of the Younger Pitt's Administration", Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research Vol. 54 Issue 129, pp 62–78
  27. ^ Short 1785, p. 61.
  28. ^ Kilburn, Matthew (24 May 2008). "Mince-pie administration (act. 1783–1784)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/95200. The name "mince-pie administration" was created by Frances Anne Crewe, Lady Crewe, a Whig political hostess. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) citing (Ehrman 1969, p. 133)
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  41. ^ Thompson, S. J.; "The first income tax, political arithmetic, and the measurement of economic growth"; Economic History Review, Vol. 66, No. 3 (2013), pp. 873-894; JSTOR 42922026
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  43. ^ Turner 2003, pp. 149–155.
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  62. ^ Duffy 1987, pp. 370–372.
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  65. ^ United Kingdom Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth "consistent series" supplied in Thomas, Ryland; Williamson, Samuel H. (2018). "What Was the U.K. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
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  94. ^ Fitzwilliam Museum (1978). Cambridge Portraits from Lely to Hockney. Exhibition catalogs, No. 86. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521223119.
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  98. ^ a b Cooper, Richard (1982). "William Pitt, Taxation, and the Needs of War". Journal of British Studies. 22 (1): 94–103. doi:10.1086/385799. ISSN 0021-9371. JSTOR 175658.
  99. ^ Parliament, Great Britain (1817). Cobbett's Parliamentary History of England, from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803. Vol. XXIX. p. 1293.
  100. ^ Journal of the House of Lords. Vol. XXXIX. H.M. Stationery Office. 1790. pp. 391–738.
  101. ^ Hague 2005, p. 589.
  102. ^ Hague 2005, p. 590.
  103. ^ Peters, Marie (23 September 2004). "Pitt, William, first earl of Chatham [Pitt the elder] (1708–1778)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22337. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  104. ^ . Amazinggracemovie.com. 23 February 2007. Archived from the original on 27 November 2018. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
  105. ^ Fletcher 2011, p. 1.
  106. ^ Hogan, Aoife (10 November 2017). "Pitt Club vote to allow female members". Varsity.
  107. ^ . Pittwater.nsw.gov.au. Pittwater Library. Archived from the original on 21 June 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2010.
  108. ^ "The Pittsburgh 'H'". Visit Pittsburgh. Retrieved 26 January 2021.

Sources edit

  • Ehrman, John (1969–1996). The Younger Pitt. Constable & Co. (3 volumes)
    • Ehrman, John (1969). The Younger Pitt, Vol. 1: The Years of Acclaim. Constable. ISBN 978-0-09455720-8.
    • Ehrman, John (1983). The Younger Pitt, Vol. 2: The Reluctant Transition. Constable. ISBN 978-0-09464930-9.
    • Ehrman, John (1996). The Younger Pitt, Vol. 3: The Consuming Struggle. Constable. ISBN 978-0-09475540-6.
  • Black, Jeremy (1994). British Foreign Policy in an Age of Revolutions, 1783-1793. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521466844.
  • Black, Jeremy (2006). "Pitt and the king". George III: America's Last King. pp. 264–287.
  • Briggs, Asa (1959). The Making of Modern England 1783–1867: The Age of Improvement.
  • Canny, Nicholas (1998). The Origins of Empire, The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume I. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924676-2. from the original on 18 January 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2009.
  • Duffy, Michael (1987). Soldiers, Sugar, and Seapower: The British Expeditions to the West Indies and the War Against Revolutionary France. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Ennis, Daniel (2002). Enter the press-gang: naval impressment in eighteenth-century British literature. University of Delaware Press. ISBN 978-0-87413-755-2.
  • Evans, Eric (2002). William Pitt the Younger. London: Routledge.
  • Fletcher, Walter Morley (2011) [1935]. The University Pitt Club: 1835–1935 (First Paperback ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-60006-5.
  • Geggus, David (1982). Slavery, War and Revolution: The British Occupation of Saint Domingue, 1793–1798. New York: Clarendon Press.
  • Hague, William (2005). William Pitt the Younger. HarperPerennial. ISBN 978-0-00-714720-5.
  • Halévy, Élie (1924). A History of the English People in 1815, Book 2.
  • Halcombe, J. J (1859). The Speaker at Home. London: Bell and Daldy.
  • Irvine, Robert (2005). Jane Austen. London: Routledge.
  • James, C.L.R. (1938). Black Jacobins. London: Penguin.
  • Kennedy, Paul (1987). The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Economic Change and Military Conflict from 1500 to 2000. New York: Random House. ISBN 9780394546742.
  • Knight, Roger (2014). Britain Against Napoleon: The Organisation of Victory, 1793–1815. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780141038940.
  • Perry, James (2005). Arrogant Armies: Great Military Disasters and the Generals Behind Them. Edison: Castle Books.
  • Short, D., ed. (1785). Criticisms on the Rolliad: Part the First (2nd ed.). London: James Ridgway. OCLC 5203303.
  • Stanhope, Philip Henry (1862). Life of the Right Honourable William Pitt, Vol. IV. John Murray.
  • Strangio, Paul; Hart, Paul 't; Walter, James (2013). Understanding Prime-Ministerial Performance: Comparative Perspectives. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199666423.
  • Turner, Michael (2003). Pitt the younger: a life. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-85285-377-8.
  • Watson, J. Steven (1960). The Reign of George III 1760–1815. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198217138.
  • Wise, Leonard F.; Hansen, Mark Hillary; Egan, E. W. (2005). Kings, Rulers, and Statesmen. Sterling. ISBN 9781402725920.

Further reading edit

Biographical edit

  • Carlyle, Thomas (1903). "William Pitt, the Younger". Critical and Miscellaneous Essays: Volume V. The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes. Vol. XXX. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons (published 1904). pp. 152–167.
  • Derry, J. W. William Pitt, the Younger (Batsford, 1962) "Makers of Britain" series
  • Duffy, Michael (2000). The Younger Pitt (Profiles In Power). Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-05279-6.
  • Ehrman, J. P. W., and Anthony Smith. "Pitt, William (1759–1806)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (2004); online 2009; accessed 12 September 2011
  • Evans, Eric J. William Pitt the Younger (1999) 110 pages; online 30 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • Furber, Holden. Henry Dundas: First Viscount Melville, 1741–1811, Political Manager of Scotland, Statesman, Administrator of British India (Oxford UP, 1931). online
  • Jarrett, Derek (1974). Pitt the Younger. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ASIN B002AMOXYK., a short scholarly biography
  • Jupp, Peter. "Grenville, William Wyndham, Baron Grenville (1759–1834)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2009) doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11501
  • Jupp, P. (1985), Lord Grenville, Oxford University Press
  • Leonard, Dick. "William Pitt, the Younger—Reformer Turned Reactionary?." in Leonard, ed. Nineteenth-Century British Premiers (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2008) pp. 5–27.
  • Mori, Jennifer. William Pitt & the French Revolution, 1785–1795 (1997) 305pp
  • Mori, Jennifer. "William Pitt the Younger" in R. Eccleshall and G. Walker, eds., Biographical Dictionary of British Prime Ministers (Routledge, 1998), pp. 85–94
  • Reilly, Robin (1978). Pitt the Younger 1759–1806. Cassell Publishers. ASIN B001OOYKNE.
  • Rose, J. Holland. William Pitt and National Revival (1911); William Pitt and the Great War (1912), solid, detailed study superseded by Ehrman; vol 1; vol 2 free;
  • Stanhope, Philip Henry [5th Earl Stanhope] (1861–1862). Life of the Right Honourable William Pitt. John Murray.. (4 volumes); includes many extracts from Pitt's correspondence vol 1 online; vol 2 online

Scholarly studies edit

  • Blanning, T. C. W. The French Revolutionary Wars, 1787–1802 (1996)
  • Bryant, Arthur. Years of Endurance 1793–1802 (1942); and Years of Victory, 1802–1812 (1944), well-written surveys of the British story
  • Cooper, William. "William Pitt, Taxation, and the Needs of War", Journal of British Studies Vol. 22, No. 1 (Autumn, 1982), pp. 94–103 JSTOR 175658
  • Derry, J. Politics in the Age of Fox, Pitt and Liverpool: Continuity and Transformation (1990)
  • Gaunt, Richard A. From Pitt to Peel: Conservative Politics in the Age of Reform (2014)
  • Kelly, Paul. "British Politics, 1783-4: The Emergence and Triumph of the Younger Pitt's Administration", Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research Vol. 54, No. 123 (1981) pp. 62–78.
  • Ledger-Lomas, Michael. "The Character of Pitt the Younger and Party Politics, 1830–1860." The Historical Journal Vol. 47, No. 3 (2004), pp. 641–661 JSTOR 4091759
  • Mori, Jennifer. "The political theory of William Pitt the Younger", History, April 1998, Vol. 83 Issue 270, pp. 234–248
  • Richards, Gerda C. "The Creations of Peers Recommended by the Younger Pitt", American Historical Review Vol. 34, No. 1 (October 1928), pp. 47–54 JSTOR 1836479
  • Sack, James J. From Jacobite to Conservative: Reaction and Orthodoxy in Britain c.1760–1832 (Cambridge University Press, 1993), does not see Pitt as a Tory
  • Sack, James J. The Grenvillites, 1801–29: Party Politics and Factionalism in the Age of Pitt and Liverpool (U. of Illinois Press, 1979)
  • Simms, Brendan. "Britain and Napoleon", The Historical Journal Vol. 41, No. 3 (1998) pp. 885–894 JSTOR 2639908
  • Wilkinson, D. "The Pitt-Portland Coalition of 1794 and the Origins of the 'Tory' party" History Vol. 83 (1998), pp. 249–264

Historiography and memory edit

  • Foster, R. E. "Forever Young: Myth, Reality and William Pitt", History Review (March 2009) No. 63
  • Ledger-Lomas, Michael. "The Character of Pitt the Younger and Party Politics, 1830–1860" The Historical Journal, Vol. 47, No. 3 (2004) pp. 641–661
  • Loades, David Michael, ed. Reader's guide to British history (2003) 2: 1044–45
  • Moncure, James A. ed. Research Guide to European Historical Biography: 1450–Present (4 vol 1992); 4:1640–46
  • Petrie, Charles, "The Bicentenary of the Younger Pitt", Quarterly Review (1959), Vol. 297 Issue 621, pp 254–265
  • Sack, J. J. "The Memory of Burke and the Memory of Pitt: English Conservatism Confronts its Past, 1806–1829", The Historical Journal Vol. 30, No. 3 (1987) pp. 623–640 JSTOR 2639162, shows that after his death the conservatives embraced him as a great patriotic hero.
  • Turner, Simon. ‘I will not alter an Iota for any Mans Opinion upon Earth’: "James Gillray's Portraits of William Pitt the Younger" in Kim Sloan et al. eds., Burning Bright: Essays in Honour of David Bindman (2015) pp. 197–206.

Primary sources edit

  • Pitt, William. The Speeches of the Right Honourable William Pitt, in the House of Commons (1817) online edition
  • Temperley, Harold and L.M. Penson, eds. Foundations of British Foreign Policy: From Pitt (1792) to Salisbury (1902) (1938), primary sources online

External links edit

  • 1791 Caricature of William Pitt by James Gillray
  • Pitt the Younger on the 10 Downing Street website
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Pitt, William" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • After Words interview with William Hague on his book William Pitt the Younger, February 27, 2005
  • Hutchinson, John (1892). "William Pitt" . Men of Kent and Kentishmen (Subscription ed.). Canterbury: Cross & Jackman. pp. 108–110.
  • Biographies of William Pitt at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
Political offices
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1782–1783
Succeeded by
Lord John Cavendish
Preceded by Prime Minister of Great Britain
19 December 1783 – 31 December 1800
Acts of Union 1800 merged
Great Britain and Ireland
to form the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Lord John Cavendish
Chancellor of the Exchequer
1783–1801
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the House of Commons
1783–1801
New title
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
1 January 1801 – 14 March 1801
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Henry Addington
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
10 May 1804 – 23 January 1806
Succeeded by
Chancellor of the Exchequer
1804–1806
Succeeded by
Leader of the House of Commons
1804–1806
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports
1792–1806
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Appleby
1781–1784
With: Philip Honywood
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Cambridge University
1784–1800
With: Earl of Euston
Parliament of Great Britain abolished
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom created
Member of Parliament for Cambridge University
1801–1806
With: Earl of Euston
Succeeded by

william, pitt, younger, 1759, january, 1806, british, statesman, youngest, last, prime, minister, great, britain, from, 1783, until, acts, union, 1800, then, first, prime, minister, united, kingdom, from, january, 1801, left, office, march, 1801, served, prime. William Pitt the Younger 28 May 1759 23 January 1806 was a British statesman the youngest and last prime minister of Great Britain from 1783 until the Acts of Union 1800 and then first prime minister of the United Kingdom from January 1801 He left office in March 1801 but served as prime minister again from 1804 until his death in 1806 He was also Chancellor of the Exchequer for all of his time as prime minister He is known as Pitt the Younger to distinguish him from his father William Pitt 1st Earl of Chatham who had previously served as prime minister and is referred to as William Pitt the Elder or Chatham by historians The Right HonourableWilliam PittPortrait by John Hoppner c 1804 06Prime Minister of the United KingdomIn office 10 May 1804 23 January 1806MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded byHenry AddingtonSucceeded byThe Lord GrenvilleIn office 1 January 1801 14 March 1801MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded byHimself as Prime Minister of Great BritainSucceeded byHenry AddingtonPrime Minister of Great BritainIn office 19 December 1783 1 January 1801MonarchGeorge IIIPreceded byThe Duke of PortlandSucceeded byHimself as Prime Minister of the United KingdomChancellor of the ExchequerIn office 10 May 1804 23 January 1806Preceded byHenry AddingtonSucceeded byLord Henry PettyIn office 19 December 1783 14 March 1801Preceded byLord John CavendishSucceeded byHenry AddingtonIn office 10 July 1782 31 March 1783Preceded byLord John CavendishSucceeded byLord John CavendishParliamentary officesLeader of the House of CommonsIn office 10 May 1804 23 January 1806Preceded byHenry AddingtonSucceeded byCharles James FoxIn office 19 December 1783 14 March 1801Preceded byLord NorthSucceeded byHenry AddingtonMember of Parliamentfor Cambridge UniversityIn office 18 May 1784 23 January 1806Preceded byLord John TownshendSucceeded byLord Henry PettyMember of Parliamentfor ApplebyIn office 8 January 1781 30 March 1784Preceded byWilliam LowtherSucceeded byJohn Leveson GowerPersonal detailsBorn 1759 05 28 28 May 1759Hayes Kent EnglandDied23 January 1806 1806 01 23 aged 46 Putney EnglandResting placeWestminster Abbey EnglandParent s William Pitt 1st Earl of ChathamLady Hester GrenvilleAlma materPembroke College CambridgeSignatureMilitary ServiceAllegianceGreat BritainService wbr branchBritish MilitiaYears of service1802 1804RankColonelUnitTrinity House Volunteer ArtilleryCinque Ports VolunteersBattles warsNapoleonic WarsWilliam Pitt by Joseph Nollekens 1808Statue of Pitt at Pembroke College Cambridge his alma materThe huge monument to William Pitt the Younger by J G Bubb in the Guildhall London faces an equally huge monument to his father William Pitt the Elder in a balanced compositionPitt s prime ministerial tenure which came during the reign of King George III was dominated by major political events in Europe including the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars Pitt although often referred to as a Tory or new Tory called himself an independent Whig and was generally opposed to the development of a strict partisan political system Pitt was regarded as an outstanding administrator who worked for efficiency and reform bringing in a new generation of competent administrators He increased taxes to pay for the great war against France and cracked down on radicalism To engage the threat of Irish support for France he engineered the Acts of Union 1800 and tried but failed to secure Catholic emancipation as part of the Union He created the new Toryism which revived the Tory Party and enabled it to stay in power for the next quarter century The historian Asa Briggs argues that his personality did not endear itself to the British mind for Pitt was too solitary and too colourless and too often exuded an attitude of superiority His greatness came in the war with France Pitt reacted to become what Lord Minto called the Atlas of our reeling globe William Wilberforce said For personal purity disinterestedness and love of this country I have never known his equal 1 Historian Charles Petrie concludes that he was one of the greatest prime ministers if on no other ground than that he enabled the country to pass from the old order to the new without any violent upheaval He understood the new Britain 2 For this he is ranked highly amongst all British prime ministers in multiple surveys 3 4 Pitt served as prime minister for a total of eighteen years 343 days making him the second longest serving British prime minister of all time after Robert Walpole Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Family 1 2 Education 2 Early political career 2 1 Member of Parliament 2 2 Chancellorship 2 3 Effects of the American War of Independence 3 First Premiership 3 1 Rise to power 3 1 1 Appointment 3 1 2 Electoral victory 3 2 First government 3 2 1 Colonial reform 3 2 2 Finances 3 2 3 Foreign affairs 3 2 4 The King s condition 3 2 5 French Revolution 3 2 6 Ideological struggle 3 2 7 Haiti 3 2 8 Ireland 3 2 9 Spithead mutiny 3 2 10 Failure 3 3 Resignation 4 In Opposition 5 Second Premiership 5 1 Reappointment 5 2 Second government 5 2 1 Resuming war 5 2 2 Finances 5 3 Death 6 Personal life 7 Legacy 8 Cultural references 8 1 Film and television 8 2 Places named after him 9 Footnotes 10 References 10 1 Sources 11 Further reading 11 1 Biographical 11 2 Scholarly studies 11 3 Historiography and memory 11 4 Primary sources 12 External linksEarly life editFamily edit See also Pitt family William Pitt the second son of William Pitt 1st Earl of Chatham was born on 28 May 1759 at Hayes Place in the village of Hayes Kent 5 He was from a political family on both sides as his mother Hester Grenville was sister of former prime minister George Grenville 6 According to biographer John Ehrman Pitt exhibited the brilliance and dynamism of his father s line and the determined methodical nature of the Grenvilles 7 Education edit Suffering from occasional poor health as a boy he was educated at home by the Reverend Edward Wilson An intelligent child Pitt quickly became proficient in Latin and Greek He was admitted to Pembroke College Cambridge on 26 April 1773 8 a month before turning fourteen He studied political philosophy classics mathematics trigonometry chemistry and history 9 At Cambridge Pitt was tutored by George Pretyman who became a close personal friend Pitt later appointed Pretyman Bishop of Lincoln then Winchester and drew upon his advice throughout his political career 10 While at Cambridge he befriended the young William Wilberforce who became a lifelong friend and political ally in Parliament 11 Pitt tended to socialise only with fellow students and others already known to him rarely venturing outside the university grounds Yet he was described as charming and friendly According to Wilberforce Pitt had an exceptional wit along with an endearingly gentle sense of humour no man ever indulged more freely or happily in that playful facetiousness which gratifies all without wounding any 12 In 1776 Pitt plagued by poor health took advantage of a little used privilege available only to the sons of noblemen and chose to graduate without having to pass examinations Pitt s father was said to have demanded him to continually translate aloud classical literature into English and declaim upon previously unknown topics in effort to develop his oratory skills 13 Pitt s father who had by then been raised to the peerage as Earl of Chatham died in 1778 As a younger son Pitt the Younger received only a small inheritance He acquired his legal education at Lincoln s Inn and was called to the bar in the summer of 1780 14 Early political career editMember of Parliament edit During the general elections of September 1780 at the age of 21 Pitt contested the University of Cambridge seat but lost 15 Still intent on entering Parliament Pitt secured the patronage of James Lowther later 1st Earl Lowther with the help of his university friend Charles Manners 4th Duke of Rutland Lowther effectively controlled the pocket borough of Appleby a by election in that constituency sent Pitt to the House of Commons in January 1781 16 Pitt s entry into parliament is somewhat ironic as he later railed against the very same pocket and rotten boroughs that had given him his seat 17 In Parliament the youthful Pitt cast aside his tendency to be withdrawn in public emerging as a noted debater right from his maiden speech 18 Pitt originally aligned himself with prominent Whigs such as Charles James Fox With the Whigs Pitt denounced the continuation of the American War of Independence as his father strongly had Instead he proposed that the prime minister Lord North make peace with the rebellious American colonies Pitt also supported parliamentary reform measures including a proposal that would have checked electoral corruption He renewed his friendship with William Wilberforce now MP for Hull with whom he frequently met in the gallery of the House of Commons 19 Chancellorship edit After Lord North s ministry collapsed in 1782 the Whig Charles Watson Wentworth 2nd Marquess of Rockingham was appointed prime minister Pitt was offered the minor post of Vice Treasurer of Ireland but he refused considering the post overly subordinate Lord Rockingham died only three months after coming to power he was succeeded by another Whig William Petty 2nd Earl of Shelburne Many Whigs who had formed a part of the Rockingham ministry including Fox now refused to serve under Lord Shelburne the new prime minister Pitt however was comfortable with Shelburne and thus joined his government he was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer 20 Fox who became Pitt s lifelong political rival then joined a coalition with Lord North with whom he collaborated to bring about the defeat of the Shelburne administration When Lord Shelburne resigned in 1783 King George III who despised Fox offered to appoint Pitt to the office of Prime Minister But Pitt wisely declined for he knew he would be incapable of securing the support of the House of Commons The Fox North coalition rose to power in a government nominally headed by William Cavendish Bentinck 3rd Duke of Portland 21 Pitt who had been stripped of his post as Chancellor of the Exchequer joined the Opposition He raised the issue of parliamentary reform in order to strain the uneasy Fox North coalition which included both supporters and detractors of reform He did not advocate an expansion of the electoral franchise but he did seek to address bribery and rotten boroughs Though his proposal failed many reformers in Parliament came to regard him as their leader instead of Charles James Fox Effects of the American War of Independence edit Losing the war and the Thirteen Colonies was a shock to the British system The war revealed the limitations of Britain s fiscal military state when it had powerful enemies and no allies depended on extended and vulnerable transatlantic lines of communication and was faced for the first time since the 17th century by both Protestant and Catholic foes The defeat heightened dissension and escalated political antagonism to the King s ministers Inside parliament the primary concern changed from fears of an over mighty monarch to the issues of representation parliamentary reform and government retrenchment Reformers sought to destroy what they saw as widespread institutional corruption The result was a crisis from 1776 to 1783 The peace in 1783 left France financially prostrate while the British economy boomed due to the return of American business That crisis ended in 1784 as a result of the King s shrewdness in outwitting Fox further explanation needed and renewed confidence in the system engendered by the leadership of Pitt Historians conclude that the loss of the American colonies enabled Britain to deal with the French Revolution with more unity and organisation than would otherwise have been the case 22 page needed Britain turned towards Asia the Pacific and later Africa with subsequent exploration leading to the rise of the Second British Empire 23 First Premiership editRise to power edit The Fox North Coalition fell in December 1783 after Fox had introduced Edmund Burke s bill to reform the East India Company to gain the patronage he so greatly lacked while the King refused to support him Fox stated the bill was necessary to save the company from bankruptcy Pitt responded that Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom It is the argument of tyrants it is the creed of slaves 24 The King was opposed to the bill when it passed in the House of Commons he secured its defeat in the House of Lords by threatening to regard anyone who voted for it as his enemy Following the bill s failure in the Upper House George III dismissed the coalition government and finally entrusted the premiership to William Pitt after having offered the position to him three times previously 25 Appointment edit A constitutional crisis arose when the King dismissed the Fox North coalition government and named Pitt to replace it Though faced with a hostile majority in Parliament Pitt was able to solidify his position within a few months Some historians argue that his success was inevitable given the decisive importance of monarchical power others argue that the King gambled on Pitt and that both would have failed but for a run of good fortune 26 Pitt at the age of 24 became Great Britain s youngest Prime Minister ever The contemporary satire The Rolliad ridiculed him for his youth 27 Above the rest majestically great Behold the infant Atlas of the state The matchless miracle of modern days In whom Britannia to the world displays A sight to make surrounding nations stare A kingdom trusted to a school boy s care Many saw Pitt as a stop gap appointment until some more senior statesman took on the role However although it was widely predicted that the new mince pie administration would not outlast the Christmas season 28 it survived for seventeen years 29 So as to reduce the power of the Opposition Pitt offered Charles James Fox and his allies posts in the Cabinet Pitt s refusal to include Lord North however thwarted his efforts The new government was immediately on the defensive and in January 1784 was defeated on a motion of no confidence Pitt however took the unprecedented step of refusing to resign despite this defeat He retained the support of the King who would not entrust the reins of power to the Fox North Coalition He also received the support of the House of Lords which passed supportive motions and many messages of support from the country at large in the form of petitions approving of his appointment which influenced some Members to switch their support to Pitt At the same time he was granted the Freedom of the City of London When he returned from the ceremony to mark this men of the City pulled Pitt s coach home themselves as a sign of respect When passing a Whig club the coach came under attack from a group of men who tried to assault Pitt When news of this spread it was assumed Fox and his associates had tried to bring down Pitt by any means 30 Electoral victory edit nbsp William Pitt in 1783 by George RomneyPitt gained great popularity with the public at large as Honest Billy who was seen as a refreshing change from the dishonesty corruption and lack of principles widely associated with both Fox and North Despite a series of defeats in the House of Commons Pitt defiantly remained in office watching the Coalition s majority shrink as some Members of Parliament left the Opposition to abstain 30 In March 1784 Parliament was dissolved and a general election ensued An electoral defeat for the government was out of the question because Pitt enjoyed the support of King George III Patronage and bribes paid by the Treasury were normally expected to be enough to secure the government a comfortable majority in the House of Commons but on this occasion the government reaped much popular support as well 31 In most popular constituencies the election was fought between candidates clearly representing either Pitt or Fox and North Early returns showed a massive swing to Pitt with the result that many Opposition Members who still had not faced election either defected stood down or made deals with their opponents to avoid expensive defeats 32 A notable exception came in Fox s own constituency of Westminster which contained one of the largest electorates in the country In a contest estimated to have cost a quarter of the total spending in the entire country Fox bitterly fought against two Pittite candidates to secure one of the two seats for the constituency Great legal wranglings ensued including the examination of every single vote cast which dragged on for more than a year Meanwhile Fox sat for the pocket borough of Tain Burghs Many saw the dragging out of the result as being unduly vindictive on the part of Pitt and eventually the examinations were abandoned with Fox declared elected Elsewhere Pitt won a personal triumph when he was elected a Member for the University of Cambridge a constituency he had long coveted and which he would continue to represent for the remainder of his life 32 First government edit Further information First Pitt ministry In domestic politics Pitt concerned himself with the cause of parliamentary reform In 1785 he introduced a bill to remove the representation of thirty six rotten boroughs and to extend in a small way the electoral franchise to more individuals 33 Pitt s support for the bill however was not strong enough to prevent its defeat in the House of Commons 34 The bill of 1785 was the last parliamentary reform proposal introduced by Pitt to British legislators Colonial reform edit nbsp The fall of Tipu Sultan and the Sultanate of Mysore in 1799His administration secure Pitt could begin to enact his agenda His first major piece of legislation as prime minister was the India Act 1784 which re organised the British East India Company and kept a watch over corruption The India Act created a new Board of Control to oversee the affairs of the East India Company It differed from Fox s failed India Bill 1783 and specified that the board would be appointed by the king 35 Pitt was appointed along with Lord Sydney who was appointed President 35 The act centralised British rule in India by reducing the power of the governors of Bombay and Madras and by increasing that of Governor General Charles Cornwallis Further augmentations and clarifications of the governor general s authority were made in 1786 presumably by Lord Sydney and presumably as a result of the company s setting up of Penang with their own superintendent governor Captain Francis Light in 1786 Convicts were originally transported to the Thirteen Colonies in North America but after the American War of Independence ended in 1783 the newly formed United States refused to accept further convicts 36 Pitt s government took the decision to settle what is now Australia and found the penal colony in August 1786 The First Fleet of 11 vessels carried over a thousand settlers including 778 convicts The Colony of New South Wales was formally proclaimed by Governor Arthur Phillip on 7 February 1788 at Sydney 37 Finances edit nbsp In A new way to pay the National Debt 1786 James Gillray caricatured Queen Charlotte and George III awash with treasury funds to cover royal debts with Pitt handing them another moneybag Another important domestic issue with which Pitt had to concern himself was the national debt which had doubled to 243 million during the American war a Every year a third of the budget of 24 million went to pay interest Pitt sought to reduce the national debt by imposing new taxes In 1786 he instituted a sinking fund so that 1 million a year was added to a fund so that it could accumulate interest eventually the money in the fund was to be used to pay off the national debt By 1792 the debt had fallen to 170 million 38 b Pitt always paid careful attention to financial issues A fifth of Britain s imports were smuggled in without paying taxes He made it easier for honest merchants to import goods by lowering tariffs on easily smuggled items such as tea wine spirits and tobacco This policy raised customs revenues by nearly 2 million a year 39 40 c In 1797 Pitt was forced to protect the kingdom s gold reserves by preventing individuals from exchanging banknotes for gold Great Britain would continue to use paper money for over two decades Pitt was also forced to introduce Great Britain s first ever income tax The new tax helped offset losses in indirect tax revenue which had been caused by a decline in trade 41 Foreign affairs edit Pitt sought European alliances to restrict French influence forming the Triple Alliance with Prussia and Holland in 1788 42 During the Nootka Sound Controversy in 1790 Pitt took advantage of the alliance to force Spain to give up its claim to exclusive control over the western coast of North and South America The Alliance however failed to produce any other important benefits for Great Britain 43 Pitt was alarmed at Russian expansion in the 1780s at the expense of the Ottoman Empire 44 The relations between Russia and Britain were disturbed during the Russo Turkish War of 1787 1792 by Pitt s subscription to the view of the Prussian government that the Triple Alliance could not with impunity allow the balance of power in Eastern Europe to be disturbed In peace talks with the Ottomans Russia refused to return the key Ochakov fortress Pitt wanted to threaten military retaliation However Russia s ambassador Semyon Vorontsov organised Pitt s enemies and launched a public opinion campaign Pitt had become alarmed at the opposition to his Russian policy in parliament Burke and Fox both uttering powerful speeches against the restoration of Ochakov to the Turks Pitt won the vote so narrowly that he gave up 45 46 The outbreak of the French Revolution and its attendant wars temporarily united Britain and Russia in an ideological alliance against French republicanism The King s condition edit In 1788 Pitt faced a major crisis when the King fell victim to a mysterious illness d a form of mental disorder that incapacitated him If the sovereign was incapable of fulfilling his constitutional duties Parliament would need to appoint a regent to rule in his place All factions agreed that the only viable candidate was the King s eldest son and heir apparent George Prince of Wales The Prince however was a supporter of Charles James Fox Had the Prince come to power he would almost surely have dismissed Pitt He did not have such an opportunity however as Parliament spent months debating legal technicalities relating to the regency Fortunately for Pitt the King recovered in February 1789 just after a Regency Bill had been introduced and passed in the House of Commons 47 The general elections of 1790 resulted in a majority for the government and Pitt continued as prime minister In 1791 he proceeded to address one of the problems facing the growing British Empire the future of British Canada By the Constitutional Act of 1791 the province of Quebec was divided into two separate provinces the predominantly French Lower Canada and the predominantly English Upper Canada In August 1792 coincident with the capture of Louis XVI by the French revolutionaries George III appointed Pitt as Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports a position whose incumbent was responsible for the coastal defences of the realm 48 The King had in 1791 offered him a Knighthood of the Garter but he suggested the honour go to his elder brother the second Earl of Chatham 48 French Revolution edit Main article French Revolutionary Wars nbsp Pitt standing centre addressing the Commons on the outbreak of the war with France 1793 painting by Anton HickelAn early favourable response to the French Revolution encouraged many in Great Britain to reopen the issue of parliamentary reform which had been dormant since Pitt s reform bill was defeated in 1785 The reformers however were quickly labelled as radicals and associates of the French revolutionaries Subsequently in 1794 Pitt s administration tried three of them for treason but lost Parliament began to enact repressive legislation in order to silence the reformers Individuals who published seditious material were punished and in 1794 the writ of habeas corpus was suspended Other repressive measures included the Seditious Meetings Act 1795 which restricted the right of individuals to assemble publicly and the Combination Acts which restricted the formation of societies or organisations that favoured political reforms Problems manning the Royal Navy also led to Pitt to introduce the Quota System in 1795 in addition to the existing system of impressment 49 The war with France was extremely expensive straining Great Britain s finances Unlike in the latter stages of the Napoleonic Wars at this point Britain had only a very small standing army and thus contributed to the war effort mainly through sea power and by supplying funds to other coalition members facing France Ideological struggle edit nbsp William Pitt by Gainsborough Dupont in the Burrell Collection GlasgowThroughout the 1790s the war against France was presented as an ideological struggle between French republicanism vs British monarchism with the British government seeking to mobilise public opinion in support of the war 50 The Pitt government waged a vigorous propaganda campaign contrasting the ordered society of Britain dominated by the aristocracy and the gentry vs the anarchy of the French revolution and always sought to associate British radicals with the revolution in France 51 Though the Pitt government did drastically reduce civil liberties and created a nationwide spy network with ordinary people being encouraged to denounce any radicals that might be in their midst the historian Eric J Evans argued the picture of Pitt s reign of terror as portrayed by the Marxist historian E P Thompson is incorrect stating there is much evidence of a popular conservative movement that rallied in defence of King and Country 52 Evans wrote that there were about 200 prosecutions of radicals suspected of sympathy with the French revolution in British courts in the 1790s which was much less than the prosecutions of suspected Jacobites after the rebellions of 1715 and 1745 51 However the spy network maintained by the government was efficient In Jane Austen s novel Northanger Abbey which was written in the 1790s but not published until 1817 one of the characters remarks that it is not possible for a family to keep secrets in these modern times when spies for the government were lurking everywhere This comment captures well the tense paranoid atmosphere of the 1790s when people were being encouraged to report radicals to the authorities 53 Haiti edit nbsp European colonies in the Caribbean in 1794In 1793 Pitt decided to take advantage of the Haitian Revolution to seize St Domingue the richest French colony in the world believing this would strike a great blow at France while bringing St Domingue into the British Empire and ensuring that the slaves in the British West Indies would not be inspired to revolt likewise 54 Many of those who owned slave plantations in the British West Indies had been greatly alarmed by the revolution which began in 1791 and they were strongly pressing Pitt to restore slavery in St Domingue lest their own slaves be inspired to seek freedom 55 Henry Dundas 1st Viscount Melville who was Pitt s Secretary of State for War instructed Sir Adam Williamson the lieutenant governor of Jamaica to sign an agreement with representatives of the French colonists that promised to restore the ancien regime slavery and discrimination against mixed race colonists a move that drew criticism from abolitionists William Wilberforce and Thomas Clarkson 56 57 The British landed in St Domingue on 20 September 1793 stating they had come to protect the white population from the blacks and were able to seize some coastal enclaves 58 The fact that the British had come to restore slavery in St Domingue inspired ferocious resistance from the Haitians who had no desire to be forced into chains again The heavy death toll caused by yellow fever the much dreaded black vomit made conquering St Domingue impossible but an undeterred Pitt launched what he called the great push in 1795 sending out an even larger British expedition 59 In November 1795 some 218 ships left Portsmouth for St Domingue 60 After the failure of the Quiberon expedition earlier in 1795 when the British landed a force of French royalists on the coast of France who were annihilated by the forces of the republic Pitt had decided it was crucial for Britain to have St Domingue no matter what the cost in lives and money to improve Britain s negotiating hand when it came time to make peace with the French republic 61 The British historian Michael Duffy argued that since Pitt committed far more manpower and money to the Caribbean expeditions especially the one to St Domingue than he ever did to Europe in the years 1793 1798 it is proper to view the West Indies as Britain s main theatre of war and Europe as more of a sideshow 62 By 1795 50 of the British Army was deployed in the West Indies with the largest contingent in St Domingue whereas the rest of the British Army was divided among Britain Europe India and North America 63 As the British death toll largely caused by yellow fever continued to climb Pitt was criticised in the House of Commons Several MPs suggested it might be better to abandon the expedition but Pitt insisted that Britain had given its word of honour that it would protect the French planters from their former slaves and the expedition to St Domingue could not be abandoned 64 The British attempt to conquer St Domingue in 1793 ended in disaster the British pulled out on 31 August 1798 after having spent 4 million pounds roughly 400 00 million in 2019 65 and having lost about 100 000 men dead or crippled for life mostly from disease over the preceding five years 66 The British historian Sir John William Fortescue wrote that Pitt and his cabinet had tried to destroy French power in these pestilent islands only to discover when it was too late that they practically destroyed the British army 59 Fortescue concluded that Pitt s attempt to add St Domingue to the British empire had killed off most of the British army cost the British treasury a fortune and weakened British influence in Europe making British power fettered numbered and paralyzed all for nothing 67 Ireland edit In May 1798 the long simmering unrest in Ireland exploded into outright rebellion with the United Irishmen Society launching a revolt to win independence for Ireland 68 Pitt took an extremely repressive approach to the United Irishmen with the Crown executing about 1 500 United Irishmen after the revolt 68 The revolt of 1798 destroyed Pitt s faith in the governing competence of the Dublin parliament dominated by Protestant Ascendancy families Thinking a less sectarian and more conciliatory approach would have avoided the uprising Pitt sought an Act of Union that would make Ireland an official part of the United Kingdom and end the Irish Question 69 The French expeditions to Ireland in 1796 and 1798 to support the United Irishmen were regarded by Pitt as near misses that might have provided an Irish base for French attacks on Britain thus making the Irish Question a national security matter 69 As the Dublin parliament did not wish to disband Pitt made generous use of what would now be called pork barrel politics to bribe Irish MPs to vote for the Act of Union 70 nbsp Irish Rebellion of 1798Throughout the 1790s the popularity of the Society of United Irishmen grew Influenced by the American and French revolutions this movement demanded independence and republicanism for Ireland 71 The United Irishmen Society was very anti clerical being equally opposed to the superstitions promoted by both the Church of England and the Roman Catholic church which caused the latter to support the Crown 72 Realising that the Catholic church was an ally in the struggle against the French revolution Pitt had tried fruitlessly to persuade the Dublin parliament to loosen the anti Catholic laws to keep things quiet in Ireland 73 Pitt s efforts to soften the anti Catholic laws failed in the face of determined resistance from the families of the Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland who forced Pitt to recall Earl Fitzwilliam as Chief Secretary for Ireland in 1795 when the latter had indicated he would support a bill for Catholic relief 74 In much of rural Ireland law and order had broken down as an economic crisis further impoverished the already poor Irish peasantry and a sectarian war with many atrocities on both sides had begun in 1793 between Catholic Defenders versus Protestant Peep o Day Boys 71 A section of the Peep o Day Boys who had renamed themselves the Loyal Orange Order in September 1795 were fanatically committed to upholding Protestant supremacy in Ireland at almost any cost 71 In December 1796 a French invasion of Ireland led by General Lazare Hoche scheduled to coordinate with a rising of the United Irishmen was only thwarted by bad weather 71 To crush the United Irishmen Pitt sent General Lake to Ulster in 1797 to call out Protestant Irish militiamen and organised an intelligence network of spies and informers 71 Spithead mutiny edit In April 1797 the mutiny of the entire Spithead fleet shook the government sailors demanded a pay increase to match inflation This mutiny occurred at the same moment that the Franco Dutch alliance were preparing an invasion of Britain To regain control of the fleet Pitt agreed to navy pay increases and had George III pardon the mutineers citation needed By contrast the more political floating republic naval mutiny at the Nore in June 1797 led by Richard Parker was handled more repressively Pitt refused to negotiate with Parker whom he wanted to see hanged as a mutineer citation needed In response to the 1797 mutinies Pitt passed the Incitement to Mutiny Act 1797 making it unlawful to advocate breaking oaths to the Crown In 1798 he passed the Defence of the Realm act which further restricted civil liberties 50 Failure edit Despite Pitt s efforts the French continued to defeat the First Coalition which collapsed in 1798 A Second Coalition consisting of Great Britain Austria Russia and the Ottoman Empire was formed but it too failed to overcome the French The fall of the Second Coalition with the defeat of the Austrians at the Battle of Marengo 14 June 1800 and at the Battle of Hohenlinden 3 December 1800 left Great Britain facing France alone Resignation edit nbsp James Gillray caricatured Pitt s resignation in Integrity retiring from Office 1801 Following the Acts of Union 1800 Pitt sought to inaugurate the new United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland by granting concessions to Roman Catholics who formed a 75 majority of the population in Ireland by abolishing various political restrictions under which they suffered The king was strongly opposed to Catholic emancipation he argued that to grant additional liberty would violate his coronation oath in which he had promised to protect the established Church of England Pitt unable to change the king s strong views resigned on 16 February 1801 75 so as to allow Henry Addington his political friend to form a new administration At about the same time however the king suffered a renewed bout of madness with the consequence that Addington could not receive his formal appointment Though he had resigned Pitt temporarily continued to discharge his duties on 18 February 1801 he brought forward the annual budget Power was transferred from Pitt to Addington on 14 March when the king recovered 76 In Opposition editShortly after leaving office Pitt supported the new administration under Addington but with little enthusiasm he frequently absented himself from Parliament preferring to remain in his Lord Warden s residence of Walmer Castle before 1802 usually spending an annual late summer holiday there and later often present from the spring until the autumn nbsp In Britannia between Death and the Doctor s 1804 Gillray caricatured Pitt as a doctor kicking Addington the previous doctor out of Britannia s sickroom From the castle he helped organise a local Volunteer Corps in anticipation of a French invasion acted as colonel of a battalion raised by Trinity House he was also a Master of Trinity House and encouraged the construction of Martello towers and the Royal Military Canal in Romney Marsh He rented land abutting the Castle to farm on which to lay out trees and walks His niece Lady Hester Stanhope designed and managed the gardens and acted as his hostess The Treaty of Amiens in 1802 between France and Britain marked the end of the French Revolutionary Wars Everyone expected it to be only a short truce By 1803 war had broken out again with France under Napoleon Bonaparte Although Addington had previously invited him to join the Cabinet Pitt preferred to join the Opposition becoming increasingly critical of the government s policies Addington unable to face the combined opposition of Pitt and Fox saw his majority gradually evaporate and resigned in late April 1804 77 Second Premiership editReappointment edit Further information Second Pitt ministry nbsp In Uncorking Old Sherry 1805 Gillray caricatured Pitt uncorking a bottle of Sheridan that is bursting out with puns and invective Pitt finally returned to the premiership on 10 May 1804 He had originally planned to form a broad coalition government with both the Tories and Whigs under one government 78 But Pitt faced the opposition of George III to the inclusion of Fox due to the King s dislike Moreover many of Pitt s former supporters including the allies of Addington joined the Opposition Thus Pitt s second ministry was considerably weaker than his first 79 Nevertheless Pitt formed a second government which consisted of largely Tory members with some former ministers of the previous ministry These include Lord Eldon as Lord High Chancellor former Foreign Secretary Lord Hawkesbury as Home Secretary Lord Harrowby as Foreign Secretary former Prime Ministers Duke of Portland and Addington as Lord Privy Seal and Lord President of the Council with Pitt s prominent allies the Viscount Melville and Lord Castlereagh as First Lord of the Admiralty and Secretary of State for the Colonies respectively 78 Second government edit Resuming war edit By the time Pitt became prime minister in 1804 the war in Europe has been escalating for sometime since the peace of Amiens in 1801 and in 1803 War of the Third Coalition begin 78 Pitt s new government resumed the war effort yet again to confront the French and to defeat Napoleon Pitt initially allied Britain with Austria Prussia and Russia with its former allies Austria Prussia and Russia against Napoleonic France and its allies The British government began placing pressure on the French Emperor Napoleon I By imposing sanctions putting up a blockade across the English Channel and undermining French naval activities Pitt s efforts proved a success and thanks to his efforts the United Kingdom joined the Third Coalition an alliance that included Austria Russia and Sweden 78 In October 1805 the British Admiral Horatio Nelson 1st Viscount Nelson won a crushing victory in the Battle of Trafalgar ensuring British naval supremacy for the remainder of the war At the annual Lord Mayor s Banquet toasting him as the Saviour of Europe Pitt responded in a few words that became the most famous speech of his life I return you many thanks for the honour you have done me but Europe is not to be saved by any single man England has saved herself by her exertions and will as I trust save Europe by her example 80 Nevertheless the Coalition collapsed having suffered significant defeats at the Battle of Ulm October 1805 and the Battle of Austerlitz December 1805 After hearing the news of Austerlitz Pitt referred to a map of Europe Roll up that map it will not be wanted these ten years 81 Finances edit Pitt was an expert in finance and served as chancellor of the exchequer 82 Critical to his success in confronting Napoleon was using Britain s superior economic resources He was able to mobilize the nation s industrial and financial resources and apply them to defeating France With a population of 16 million the United Kingdom was barely half the size of France which had a population of 30 million In terms of soldiers however the French numerical advantage was offset by British subsidies that paid for a large proportion of the Austrian and Russian soldiers peaking at about 450 000 in 1813 83 Britain used its economic power to expand the Royal Navy doubling the number of frigates and increasing the number of the larger ships of the line by 50 while increasing the roster of sailors from 15 000 to 133 000 in eight years after the war began in 1793 The British national output remained strong and the well organized business sector channelled products into what the military needed France meanwhile saw its navy shrink by more than half 84 The system of smuggling finished products into the continent undermined French efforts to ruin the British economy by cutting off markets By 1814 the budget that Pitt in his last years had largely shaped had expanded to 66 million e including 10 million for the Navy 40 million for the Army 10 million for the Allies and 38 million as interest on the national debt The national debt soared to 679 million f more than double the GDP It was willingly supported by hundreds of thousands of investors and tax payers despite the higher taxes on land and a new income tax 85 The whole cost of the war came to 831 million The French financial system was inadequate and Napoleon s forces had to rely in part on requisitions from conquered lands 86 87 88 nbsp Pitt s monument over the west door of Westminster Abbey sculpted by Richard Westmacott Death edit The setbacks took a toll on Pitt s health He had long suffered from poor health beginning in childhood and was plagued with gout and biliousness which was worsened by a fondness for port that began when he was advised to consume it to deal with his chronic ill health 89 On 23 January 1806 Pitt died at Bowling Green House on Putney Heath probably from peptic ulceration of his stomach or duodenum he was unmarried and left no children 90 91 Pitt s debts amounted to 40 000 when he died but Parliament agreed to pay them on his behalf 92 93 A motion was made to honour him with a public funeral and a monument it passed despite some opposition Pitt s body was buried in Westminster Abbey on 22 February having lain in state for two days in the Palace of Westminster 94 Pitt was succeeded as Prime Minister by his first cousin William Grenville 1st Baron Grenville who headed the Ministry of All the Talents a coalition which included Charles James Fox 95 Personal life edit nbsp Arms of William Pitt the YoungerPitt became known as a three bottle man in reference to his heavy consumption of port wine Each of these bottles would be around 350 millilitres 12 US fl oz in volume 96 At one point rumours emerged of an intended marriage to Eleanor Eden to whom Pitt had grown close Pitt broke off the potential marriage in 1797 writing to her father Lord Auckland I am compelled to say that I find the obstacles to it decisive and insurmountable 96 Of his social relationships biographer William Hague writes Pitt was happiest among his Cambridge companions or family He had no social ambitions and it was rare for him to set out to make a friend The talented collaborators of his first 18 months in office Beresford Wyvil and Twining passed in and out of his mind along with their areas of expertise Pitt s lack of interest in enlarging his social circle meant that it did not grow to encompass any women outside his own family a fact that produced a good deal of rumour From late 1784 a series of satirical verses appeared in The Morning Herald drawing attention to Pitt s lack of knowledge of women Tis true indeed we oft abuse him Because he bends to no man But slander s self dares not accuse him Of stiffness to a woman Others made snide references to Pitt s friendship with Tom Steele Secretary to the Treasury At the height of the constitutional crisis in 1784 Sheridan had compared Pitt to James I s favourite the Duke of Buckingham a clear reference to homosexuality Socially Pitt preferred the company of young men and would continue to do so into his thirties and forties It may be that Pitt had homosexual leanings but suppressed any urge to act on them for the sake of his ambitions He could be charming to women but it seems certain that he rejected intimacy whenever it was proffered and would do so publicly at a later date In practical terms it appears that Pitt was essentially asexual throughout his life 96 Legacy edit nbsp Marble bust of William Pitt by Joseph Nollekens 1807 Yale Center for British ArtWilliam Pitt the Younger was a prime minister who consolidated the powers of his office Though he was sometimes opposed by members of his Cabinet he helped define the role of the Prime Minister as the supervisor and co ordinator of the various government departments After his death the conservatives embraced him as a great patriotic hero 97 One of Pitt s accomplishments was a rehabilitation of the nation s finances after the American War of Independence 98 Pitt made changes to the tax system in order to improve its capture of revenue which helped manage the mounting national debt 98 Some of Pitt s domestic plans were not successful he failed to secure parliamentary reform emancipation or the abolition of the slave trade although this last took place with the Slave Trade Act 1807 the year after his death The 1792 Slave Trade Bill passed the House of Commons mangled and mutilated by the modifications and amendments of Pitt it lay for years in the House of Lords 99 100 Biographer William Hague considers the unfinished abolition of the slave trade to be Pitt s greatest failure 101 He notes that by the end of Pitt s career conditions were in place that would have allowed a skillful attempt to pass an abolition bill to succeed partly because of the long campaigning Pitt had encouraged with his friend William Wilberforce Hague goes on to note that the failure was likely due to Pitt being a spent force by the time favourable conditions had arisen In Hague s opinion Pitt s long premiership tested the natural limits of how long it is possible to be at the top From 1783 to 1792 he faced each fresh challenge with brilliance from 1793 he showed determination but sometimes faltered and from 1804 he was worn down by the combination of a narrow majority and war 102 nbsp Statue in George Street EdinburghHistorian Marie Peters has compared his strengths and weaknesses with his father Having some of his father s volatility and much of the self confidence bordering on arrogance the younger Pitt inherited superb and carefully nurtured oratorical gifts These gave him like his father unsurpassed command of the Commons and power to embody the national will in wartime There were however significant differences The younger Pitt s eloquence unlike his father s included the force of sustained reasoned exposition This was perhaps in part expression of his thoroughly professional approach to politics so unlike his father s but possibly deriving something from Shelburne The younger Pitt was continuously engaged in depth with major issues of his day He regularly and energetically sought the best information He was genuinely progressive as his father was not on parliamentary reform Catholic emancipation commercial policy and administrative reform His constructive capacity in his chief responsibility financial policy and administration far surpassed his father s record if it was less impressive and perhaps more equally matched in foreign and imperial policy and strategy With good reason his long career in high office was the mirror image of his father s short tenure In contrast only briefly was Chatham able to rise to the challenge of his age By his last decade time had passed him by 103 Cultural references editFilm and television edit William Pitt is depicted in several films and television programs Robert Donat portrays Pitt in the 1942 biopic The Young Mr Pitt which chronicles the historical events of Pitt s life Pitt s attempts during his tenure as Prime Minister to cope with the dementia of King George III are portrayed by Julian Wadham in the 1994 film The Madness of King George The 2006 film Amazing Grace with Benedict Cumberbatch in the role of Pitt depicts his close friendship with William Wilberforce the leading abolitionist in Parliament 104 Pitt is caricatured as a boy prime minister in the third series of the television comedy Blackadder in which Simon Osborne plays a fictionalised Pitt as a petulant teenager who has just come to power right in the middle of his exams in the episode Dish and Dishonesty A fictionalised younger brother Pitt the Even Younger appeared as a candidate standing in the Dunny on the Wold by election In the series of prime ministerial biographies Number 10 produced by Yorkshire Television Pitt was portrayed by Jeremy Brett In the first episode of the 2016 ITV TV series Victoria written by Daisy Goodwin Lord Melbourne cites Pitt the Younger becoming Prime Minister at 24 as a reason why youth should not disqualify the 18 year old Queen Victoria from ruling Britain Places named after him edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources William Pitt the Younger news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The University Pitt Club a club for students at the University of Cambridge was founded in 1835 to do honour to the name and memory of Mr William Pitt 105 106 Pittwater in Australia was named in 1788 by British explorer Arthur Phillip 107 Pitt Street is the main financial precinct street in the Central business district of Sydney Pitt Town near Windsor outside of Sydney together with another township called Wilberforce Mount Pitt second highest mountain on Norfolk Island Pitt Water a body of water in South East Tasmania Pitt s Head in Snowdonia National Park in Wales was named after the rock formation s resemblance to the Prime Minister While Chatham County North Carolina was named after his father Pittsboro North Carolina was named after Pitt the Younger In Penang Malaysia Pitt Street and Pitt Lane were named for him as British Prime Minister when George Town was founded in 1786 In Hong Kong a street on Kowloon side Pitt Street is named after him Pittsburgh Ontario Pitt Street in Glasgow is named after William Pitt the Younger Pitt Street in Windsor Ontario Pitt Street in Kingston Ontario Pitt Street in Cornwall Ontario Rue Pitt Montreal Quebec Chemin Pitt Montreal Quebec Pitt Street Sydney Mines Nova Scotia Pitt Street Saint John New Brunswick Pitt House High Wycombe Buckinghamshire Pitt s Cottage Westerham Kent former home of Pitt the Younger and more recently a local curry house now closed The Pitt River in British Columbia Canada William Pitt Avenue Deal Kent Pitt Street in Southport England Pitt Street in Auckland New ZealandNote Pittsburgh Pennsylvania was named for his father William Pitt 1st Earl of Chatham 108 Footnotes edit about 33 billion today about 19 billion today about 269 million today The consensus view among historians is that the King was suffering from the blood disorder porphyria which was unknown at this time If protracted and untreated it has serious mentally debilitating effects about 4 billion today about 46 billion todayReferences edit Briggs 1959 pp 148 149 Charles Petrie The Bicentenary of the Younger Pitt Quarterly Review 1959 Vol 297 Issue 621 pp 254 265 Strangio Hart amp Walter 2013 p 225 Wise Hansen amp Egan 2005 p 298 Hague 2005 p 14 Hague 2005 p 19 Ehrman 1969 p 4 Vol 1 Pitt the Hon William PT773W A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge William Pitt the Younger 1759 1806 HistoryHome co uk Spartacus Educational William Pitt Spartacus Educational com Archived from the original on 12 April 2010 Retrieved 27 February 2019 History William Wilberforce 1759 1833 BBC Retrieved 11 October 2010 Hague 2005 p 30 Halcombe 1859 p 110 Hague 2005 p 46 William Pitt the Younger Historical importance Britannica Online Encyclopedia Retrieved 23 April 2010 William Pitt The Younger 1783 1801 and 1804 6 Tory 10 Downing Street PMs in history Archived from the original on 7 August 2008 Retrieved 23 April 2010 Hague 2005 p 89 Hague 2005 pp 62 65 Hague 2005 p 71 Hague 2005 p 99 Hague 2005 p 124 Black 2006 Canny 1998 p 92 Hague 2005 p 140 Hague 2005 p 146 Paul Kelly British Politics 1783 4 The Emergence and Triumph of the Younger Pitt s Administration Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research Vol 54 Issue 129 pp 62 78 Short 1785 p 61 Kilburn Matthew 24 May 2008 Mince pie administration act 1783 1784 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 95200 The name mince pie administration was created by Frances Anne Crewe Lady Crewe a Whig political hostess Subscription or UK public library membership required citing Ehrman 1969 p 133 Hague 2005 p 152 a b Hague 2005 p 166 Hague 2005 p 173 a b Hague 2005 p 170 Hague 2005 p 191 Hague 2005 p 193 a b Hague 2005 p 182 Why were convicts transported to Australia Sydney Living Museums Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 George Burnett Barton 1889 History of New South Wales From the Records Volume I Governor Phillip Chapter 1 4 Project Gutenberg of Australia Charles Potter Government Printer Turner 2003 p 94 Foster R E March 2009 Forever Young Myth Reality and William Pitt History Review No 63 Archived from the original on 14 December 2013 Hoh Cheung Mui Lorna H 1961 William Pitt and the Enforcement of the Commutation Act 1784 1788 The English Historical Review 76 300 447 465 doi 10 1093 ehr LXXVI CCC 447 JSTOR 558296 Thompson S J The first income tax political arithmetic and the measurement of economic growth Economic History Review Vol 66 No 3 2013 pp 873 894 JSTOR 42922026 Black 1994 p page needed Turner 2003 pp 149 155 Holland Rose John William Pitt and National Revival 1911 pp 589 607 Black 1994 p 290 Ehrman 1969 p xx Vol 2 Gronbeck Bruce E Fall 1970 Government s Stance in Crisis A Case Study of Pitt the Younger Western Speech 34 issue 4 250 261 a b Hague 2005 p 309 Ennis 2002 p 34 a b Evans 2002 p 57 a b Evans 2002 p 59 Evans 2002 p 58 Irvine 2005 p 93 Perry 2005 pp 63 64 Duffy 1987 p 28 James 1938 p 109 Geggus 1982 p page needed Perry 2005 p 64 a b Perry 2005 p 69 Duffy 1987 p 197 Duffy 1987 p 162 Duffy 1987 pp 370 372 Evans 2002 p 50 Perry 2005 p 73 United Kingdom Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth consistent series supplied in Thomas Ryland Williamson Samuel H 2018 What Was the U K GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved 2 February 2020 Perry 2005 pp 75 76 Perry 2005 p 76 a b Evans 2002 pp 67 68 a b Evans 2002 p 68 Evans 2002 pp 68 69 a b c d e Evans 2002 p 67 Evans 2002 p 65 Evans 2002 p 66 Evans 2002 pp 66 67 Hague 2005 p 479 Hague 2005 p 484 Hague 2005 p 526 a b c d William Pitt the Younger 1759 1806 Hague 2005 pp 529 533 Hague 2005 p 565 Stanhope 1862 p 369 O Brien Patrick Political Biography and Pitt the Younger as Chancellor of the Exchequer History 1998 Vol 83 No 270 pp 225 233 Kennedy 1987 pp 128 129 Briggs 1959 p 143 Cooper Richard 1982 William Pitt Taxation and the Needs of War Journal of British Studies 22 1 94 103 doi 10 1086 385799 JSTOR 175658 Halevy 1924 pp 205 228 Knight 2014 p page needed Watson 1960 pp 374 277 406 407 463 471 Marjie Bloy 4 January 2006 William Pitt the Younger 1759 1806 The Victorian Web Retrieved 11 September 2011 Hague 2005 p 578 Bowling Green House Putney Heath The Private Life of William Pitt 1759 1806 13 November 2013 Archived from the original on 25 July 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2014 PITT Hon William 1759 1806 of Holwood and Walmer Castle Kent The History of Parliament Retrieved 1 July 2016 William Pitt the Younger Regency History Retrieved 1 July 2016 Fitzwilliam Museum 1978 Cambridge Portraits from Lely to Hockney Exhibition catalogs No 86 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521223119 Hague 2005 p 581 a b c Hague William 31 August 2004 He was something between God and man The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Sack J J 1987 The Memory of Burke and the Memory of Pitt English Conservatism Confronts Its Past 1806 1829 The Historical Journal 30 3 623 640 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00020914 JSTOR 2639162 S2CID 154447696 a b Cooper Richard 1982 William Pitt Taxation and the Needs of War Journal of British Studies 22 1 94 103 doi 10 1086 385799 ISSN 0021 9371 JSTOR 175658 Parliament Great Britain 1817 Cobbett s Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803 Vol XXIX p 1293 Journal of the House of Lords Vol XXXIX H M Stationery Office 1790 pp 391 738 Hague 2005 p 589 Hague 2005 p 590 Peters Marie 23 September 2004 Pitt William first earl of Chatham Pitt the elder 1708 1778 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 22337 Subscription or UK public library membership required Amazing Grace movie Amazinggracemovie com 23 February 2007 Archived from the original on 27 November 2018 Retrieved 11 October 2010 Fletcher 2011 p 1 Hogan Aoife 10 November 2017 Pitt Club vote to allow female members Varsity Pittwater s past Pittwater nsw gov au Pittwater Library Archived from the original on 21 June 2017 Retrieved 11 October 2010 The Pittsburgh H Visit Pittsburgh Retrieved 26 January 2021 Sources edit Ehrman John 1969 1996 The Younger Pitt Constable amp Co 3 volumes Ehrman John 1969 The Younger Pitt Vol 1 The Years of Acclaim Constable ISBN 978 0 09455720 8 Ehrman John 1983 The Younger Pitt Vol 2 The Reluctant Transition Constable ISBN 978 0 09464930 9 Ehrman John 1996 The Younger Pitt Vol 3 The Consuming Struggle Constable ISBN 978 0 09475540 6 Black Jeremy 1994 British Foreign Policy in an Age of Revolutions 1783 1793 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521466844 Black Jeremy 2006 Pitt and the king George III America s Last King pp 264 287 Briggs Asa 1959 The Making of Modern England 1783 1867 The Age of Improvement Canny Nicholas 1998 The Origins of Empire The Oxford History of the British Empire Volume I Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924676 2 Archived from the original on 18 January 2016 Retrieved 22 July 2009 Duffy Michael 1987 Soldiers Sugar and Seapower The British Expeditions to the West Indies and the War Against Revolutionary France Oxford Clarendon Press Ennis Daniel 2002 Enter the press gang naval impressment in eighteenth century British literature University of Delaware Press ISBN 978 0 87413 755 2 Evans Eric 2002 William Pitt the Younger London Routledge Fletcher Walter Morley 2011 1935 The University Pitt Club 1835 1935 First Paperback ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 60006 5 Geggus David 1982 Slavery War and Revolution The British Occupation of Saint Domingue 1793 1798 New York Clarendon Press Hague William 2005 William Pitt the Younger HarperPerennial ISBN 978 0 00 714720 5 Halevy Elie 1924 A History of the English People in 1815 Book 2 Halcombe J J 1859 The Speaker at Home London Bell and Daldy Irvine Robert 2005 Jane Austen London Routledge James C L R 1938 Black Jacobins London Penguin Kennedy Paul 1987 The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers Economic Change and Military Conflict from 1500 to 2000 New York Random House ISBN 9780394546742 Knight Roger 2014 Britain Against Napoleon The Organisation of Victory 1793 1815 London Penguin Books ISBN 9780141038940 Perry James 2005 Arrogant Armies Great Military Disasters and the Generals Behind Them Edison Castle Books Short D ed 1785 Criticisms on the Rolliad Part the First 2nd ed London James Ridgway OCLC 5203303 Stanhope Philip Henry 1862 Life of the Right Honourable William Pitt Vol IV John Murray Strangio Paul Hart Paul t Walter James 2013 Understanding Prime Ministerial Performance Comparative Perspectives Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199666423 Turner Michael 2003 Pitt the younger a life Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 85285 377 8 Watson J Steven 1960 The Reign of George III 1760 1815 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198217138 Wise Leonard F Hansen Mark Hillary Egan E W 2005 Kings Rulers and Statesmen Sterling ISBN 9781402725920 Further reading editBiographical edit Carlyle Thomas 1903 William Pitt the Younger Critical and Miscellaneous Essays Volume V The Works of Thomas Carlyle in Thirty Volumes Vol XXX New York Charles Scribner s Sons published 1904 pp 152 167 Derry J W William Pitt the Younger Batsford 1962 Makers of Britain series Duffy Michael 2000 The Younger Pitt Profiles In Power Longman ISBN 978 0 582 05279 6 Ehrman J P W and Anthony Smith Pitt William 1759 1806 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 online 2009 accessed 12 September 2011 Evans Eric J William Pitt the Younger 1999 110 pages online Archived 30 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine Furber Holden Henry Dundas First Viscount Melville 1741 1811 Political Manager of Scotland Statesman Administrator of British India Oxford UP 1931 online Jarrett Derek 1974 Pitt the Younger Weidenfeld and Nicolson ASIN B002AMOXYK a short scholarly biography Jupp Peter Grenville William Wyndham Baron Grenville 1759 1834 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2009 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 11501 Jupp P 1985 Lord Grenville Oxford University Press Leonard Dick William Pitt the Younger Reformer Turned Reactionary in Leonard ed Nineteenth Century British Premiers Palgrave Macmillan UK 2008 pp 5 27 Mori Jennifer William Pitt amp the French Revolution 1785 1795 1997 305pp Mori Jennifer William Pitt the Younger in R Eccleshall and G Walker eds Biographical Dictionary of British Prime Ministers Routledge 1998 pp 85 94 Reilly Robin 1978 Pitt the Younger 1759 1806 Cassell Publishers ASIN B001OOYKNE Rose J Holland William Pitt and National Revival 1911 William Pitt and the Great War 1912 solid detailed study superseded by Ehrman vol 1 vol 2 free Stanhope Philip Henry 5th Earl Stanhope 1861 1862 Life of the Right Honourable William Pitt John Murray 4 volumes includes many extracts from Pitt s correspondence vol 1 online vol 2 online Scholarly studies edit Blanning T C W The French Revolutionary Wars 1787 1802 1996 Bryant Arthur Years of Endurance 1793 1802 1942 and Years of Victory 1802 1812 1944 well written surveys of the British story Cooper William William Pitt Taxation and the Needs of War Journal of British Studies Vol 22 No 1 Autumn 1982 pp 94 103 JSTOR 175658 Derry J Politics in the Age of Fox Pitt and Liverpool Continuity and Transformation 1990 Gaunt Richard A From Pitt to Peel Conservative Politics in the Age of Reform 2014 Kelly Paul British Politics 1783 4 The Emergence and Triumph of the Younger Pitt s Administration Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research Vol 54 No 123 1981 pp 62 78 Ledger Lomas Michael The Character of Pitt the Younger and Party Politics 1830 1860 The Historical Journal Vol 47 No 3 2004 pp 641 661 JSTOR 4091759 Mori Jennifer The political theory of William Pitt the Younger History April 1998 Vol 83 Issue 270 pp 234 248 Richards Gerda C The Creations of Peers Recommended by the Younger Pitt American Historical Review Vol 34 No 1 October 1928 pp 47 54 JSTOR 1836479 Sack James J From Jacobite to Conservative Reaction and Orthodoxy in Britain c 1760 1832 Cambridge University Press 1993 does not see Pitt as a Tory Sack James J The Grenvillites 1801 29 Party Politics and Factionalism in the Age of Pitt and Liverpool U of Illinois Press 1979 Simms Brendan Britain and Napoleon The Historical Journal Vol 41 No 3 1998 pp 885 894 JSTOR 2639908 Wilkinson D The Pitt Portland Coalition of 1794 and the Origins of the Tory party History Vol 83 1998 pp 249 264 Historiography and memory edit Foster R E Forever Young Myth Reality and William Pitt History Review March 2009 No 63 Ledger Lomas Michael The Character of Pitt the Younger and Party Politics 1830 1860 The Historical Journal Vol 47 No 3 2004 pp 641 661 Loades David Michael ed Reader s guide to British history 2003 2 1044 45 Moncure James A ed Research Guide to European Historical Biography 1450 Present 4 vol 1992 4 1640 46 Petrie Charles The Bicentenary of the Younger Pitt Quarterly Review 1959 Vol 297 Issue 621 pp 254 265 Sack J J The Memory of Burke and the Memory of Pitt English Conservatism Confronts its Past 1806 1829 The Historical Journal Vol 30 No 3 1987 pp 623 640 JSTOR 2639162 shows that after his death the conservatives embraced him as a great patriotic hero Turner Simon I will not alter an Iota for any Mans Opinion upon Earth James Gillray s Portraits of William Pitt the Younger in Kim Sloan et al eds Burning Bright Essays in Honour of David Bindman 2015 pp 197 206 Primary sources edit Pitt William The Speeches of the Right Honourable William Pitt in the House of Commons 1817 online edition Temperley Harold and L M Penson eds Foundations of British Foreign Policy From Pitt 1792 to Salisbury 1902 1938 primary sources onlineExternal links editWilliam Pitt the Younger at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource 1791 Caricature of William Pitt by James Gillray Pitt the Younger on the 10 Downing Street website Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Pitt William Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press After Words interview with William Hague on his book William Pitt the Younger February 27 2005 Hutchinson John 1892 William Pitt Men of Kent and Kentishmen Subscription ed Canterbury Cross amp Jackman pp 108 110 Biographies of William Pitt at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Political officesPreceded byLord John Cavendish Chancellor of the Exchequer1782 1783 Succeeded byLord John CavendishPreceded byThe Duke of Portland Prime Minister of Great Britain19 December 1783 31 December 1800 Acts of Union 1800 mergedGreat Britain and Irelandto form the United KingdomPreceded byLord John Cavendish Chancellor of the Exchequer1783 1801 Succeeded byHenry AddingtonPreceded byLord NorthCharles James Fox Leader of the House of Commons1783 1801New titleActs of Union 1800 mergedGreat Britain and Irelandto form the United Kingdom Prime Minister of the United Kingdom1 January 1801 14 March 1801 Succeeded byHenry AddingtonPreceded byHenry Addington Prime Minister of the United Kingdom10 May 1804 23 January 1806 Succeeded byThe Lord GrenvilleChancellor of the Exchequer1804 1806 Succeeded byLord Henry PettyLeader of the House of Commons1804 1806 Succeeded byCharles James FoxHonorary titlesPreceded byThe Earl of Guilford Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports1792 1806 Succeeded byThe Earl of LiverpoolParliament of Great BritainPreceded byPhilip HonywoodWilliam Lowther Member of Parliament for Appleby1781 1784 With Philip Honywood Succeeded byJohn Leveson GowerRichard PennPreceded byJames MansfieldLord John Townshend Member of Parliament for Cambridge University1784 1800 With Earl of Euston Parliament of Great Britain abolishedParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byParliament of the United Kingdom created Member of Parliament for Cambridge University1801 1806 With Earl of Euston Succeeded byEarl of EustonLord Henry Petty Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Pitt the Younger amp oldid 1188383022, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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