Online Encyclopedia

HENRY CHAPLIN (1841– )

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 852 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HENRY CHAPLIN (1841– )  ,
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English statesman, second son of the Rev . Henry Chaplin, of Blankney,
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Lincolnshire, was educated at
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Harrow and Christ Church, Oxford, and first entered parliament in 1868 as Conservative member for
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Mid-Lincolnshire . He represented this constituency (which under the Redistribution Act of 1885 became the
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Sleaford division) till 1906, when he was defeated, but in 1907 returned to the House of
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Commons as member for
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Wimbledon at a by-election . In 1876 he married a daughter of the 3rd duke of Sutherland, but lost his wife in 1881 . Outside the House of Commons he was a familial figure on the
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Turf, winning the Derby with
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Hermit in 1867; and in politics from the first the "
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Squire of Blankney " took an active
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interest in agricultural questions, as a popular and typical representative of the English "country gentleman" class . Having filled the office of chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster in Lord Salisbury's short
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ministry of 1885–1886, he became president of the new Board of Agriculture in 1889, with a seat in the
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cabinet, and retained this
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post till 1892 . In the Conservative cabinet of 1895–1900 he was president of the
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Local Government Board, and was responsible for the Agricultural Rates Act of 1896; but he was not included in the ministry after its reconstruction in 1900 . Mr Chaplin had always been an advocate of protectionism, being in this respect the most prominent inheritor of the views of Lord George Bentinck; and when in 1903 the Tariff Reform
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movement began under Mr Chamberlain's leadership, he gave it his enthusiastic support, becoming a member of the Tariff Commission and one of the most strenuous advocates in the country of the new doctrines in opposition to
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free trade .

End of Article: HENRY CHAPLIN (1841– )
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