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HENRY GOULBURN (1784-1856)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 284 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HENRY GOULBURN (1784-1856)  ,
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English statesman, was born in
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London on the 19th of March 1784 and was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge . In r8o8 he became member of parliament for
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Horsham; in 1810 he was appointed under-secretary for home affairs and two and a
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half years later he was made under-secretary for war and the colonies . Still retaining office in the Tory government he became a privy councillor in 1821, and just afterwards was appointed chief secretary to the lord-
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lieutenant of Ireland, a position which he held until
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April 1827 . Here although frequently denounced as an Orangeman, his period of office was on the whole a successful one, and in 1823 he managed to pass the Irish Tithe Composition
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Bill . In
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January 1828 he was made chancellor of the
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exchequer under the duke of Wellington; like his leader he disliked
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Roman Catholic emancipation, which he voted against in 1828 . In the domain of
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finance Goulburn's chief achievements were to reduce the
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rate of
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interest on
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part of the
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national debt, and to allow any one to sell
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beer upon payment of a small
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annual
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fee, a
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complete change of policy with regard to the drink
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traffic . Leaving office with Wellington in November 1830, Goulburn was home secretary under
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Sir Robert Peel for four months in 1835, and when this statesman returned to office in September 1841 he became chancellor of the exchequer for the second time . Although Peel himself did some of the chancellor's
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work, Goulburn was responsible for a further reduction in the rate of interest on the national debt, and he aided his chief in the struggle which ended in the repeal of the corn
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laws . With his colleagues he
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left office in
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June 1846 . After representing Horsham in the House of
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Commons for over four years Goulburn was successively member for St Germans, for West
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Looe, and for the city of
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Armagh . In May 1831 he was elected for Cambridge University, and he retained this seat until his
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death on the 12th of January 1856 at Betchworth House,
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Dorking . Goulburn was one of Peel's firmest supporters and most intimate friends .

His eldest son,

Henry (1813-1843), was senior classic and second wrangler at Cambridge in 1835 . See S . Walpole,
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History of England (1878-1886) .

End of Article: HENRY GOULBURN (1784-1856)
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