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See also: Bart
.
(c
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1624-1684), See also: English soldier and diplomatist, son of See also: Emmanuel See also: Downing, See also: barrister, and of See also: Lucy, See also: sister of Governor See also: John
See also: Winthrop, was See also: born in See also: England about 1624.1 His See also: family joined Winthrop in See also: America in 1638, settling in See also: Salem, Massachusetts, and Downing studied at Harvard See also: College
.
In 1645 he sailed for the West Indies as a preacher and instructor of the See also: seamen, and arrived in England some See also: time afterwards, becoming See also: chaplain to Colonel John Okey's regiment
.
Subsequently he seems to have abandoned his religious vocation for a military career, and in 165o he was scout-mastergeneral of See also: Cromwell's forces in Scotland, and as such received in 1657 a See also: salary of £365 and £500 as a See also: teller of the See also: exchequer
.
His See also: marriage in 1654 with Frances, daughter of See also: Sir See also: William
See also: Howard of Naworth, and sister of the 1st See also: earl of See also: Carlisle, aided his See also: advancement
.
In Cromwell's parliament of 1654 he represented See also: Edinburgh, and Carlisle in those of 1656 and 1659
.
He was one of the first to urge Cromwell to take the royal title and restore the old constitution
.
In 1655 he was sent to See also: France to remonstrate on the See also: massacre of the See also: Protestant Vaudois
.
Later in 1657 he was appointed See also: resident at The Hague, to effect a union of the Protestant See also: European See also: powers, to mediate between See also: Portugal and See also: Holland and between Sweden and
See also: Denmark, to defend the interests of the English traders against the Dutch, and to inform the See also: government concerning the movements of the exiled royalists
.
He showed himself ip these negotiations an able diplomatist
.
He was maintained in his See also: post during the interregnum subsequent to the fall of See also: Richard Cromwell, and was thus enabled in See also: April 166o to make his See also: peace with See also: Charles II., to whom he communicated
See also: Thurloe's despatches, and declared his abandonment of " principles sucked in " in New England, of which he now "saw the error." At the Restoration, therefore, Downing was knighted
I The date of his See also: birth is variously given as 1623, 1624 and 1625 (Sibley's Harvard Graduates, 1883).(May 166o), was continued in his See also: embassy in Holland, was confirmed in his tellership of the exchequer, and was further rewarded with a valuable piece of See also: land adjoining St See also: James's
See also: Park for See also: building purposes, now known as Downing Street.' Considering his past, he showed a very indecent zeal in arresting in Holland and handing over for execution the regicides Barkstead, See also: Corbet and Okey
.
See also: Pepys, who characterized his conduct as odious though useful to the See also: king, calls him a "perfidious
See also: rogue," and remarks that " all the See also: world took See also: notice of him for a most ungrateful villain for his pains." 3 On the 1st of See also: July 1663 he was created a See also: baronet
.
Downing had from the first been hostile to the Dutch as the commercial rivals of England
.
He had strongly supported the Navigation See also: Act of 166o, and he now deliberately See also: drew on the fatal and disastrous war
.
During its continuance he took See also: part at home in the management of the See also: treasury, introduced the appropriation of supplies, opposed strongly by See also: Clarendon as an encroachment on the See also: prerogative, and in May 1667 was made secretary to the commissioners, his See also: appointment being much welcomed by Pepys.4 He had been returned for See also: Morpeth in the See also: convention parliament of April 166o, a constituency which he represented in every ensuing parliament till his See also: death, and he spoke with ability on See also: financial and commercial questions
.
He was appointed a See also: commissioner of the customs in 1671
.
The same See also: year he was again sent to Holland to replace Sir William See also: Temple, to break up the policy of the Triple See also: alliance and incite another war between Holland and England in furtherance of the French policy
.
His unpopularity there was extreme, and after three months' residence Downing fled to England, in fear of the fury of the See also: mob
.
For this unauthorized step he was sent to the Tower on the 7th of See also: February 1672, but released some few See also: weeks after-wards
.
He defended the Declaration of Indulgence the same year, and made himself useful in supporting the See also: court policy
.
He died in July 1684
.
Downing Street, See also: London, is named after him, while Downing College, Cambridge, derived its name from his See also: grandson, the 3rd baronet
.
The title became See also: extinct when the 4th baronet, Sir See also: Jacob G
.
Downing, died in 1764 . . Downing was undoubtedly a See also: man of See also: great See also: political and See also: diplomatic ability, but his talents were rarely employed for the See also: advantage of his country and his character was marked by all the mean vices, treachery, avarice, servility and ingratitude
.
" A See also: George Downing " became a proverbial expression in New England to denote a false man who betrayed his See also: trust.' He published a large number of declarations and discourses, mostly in Dutch, enumerated in Sibley's biography, and wrote also " A True Relation of the Progress of the Parliament's Forces in Scotland" (1651), See also: Thomason Tracts, Brit
.
See also: Mus., E 64o (5)
.
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