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See also: English statesman, second son of the Rev
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See also: Canon See also: William
See also: Vernon See also: Harcourt (q.v.), of Nuneham See also: Park, See also: Oxford, was See also: born on the 14th of See also: October 1827
.
Canon Harcourt was the See also: fourth son and eventually heir of See also: Edward Harcourt (1757-1847), archbishop of See also: York, who was the son of the 1st See also: Lord Vernon (d
.
178o), and who took the name of Harcourt alone instead of Vernon on succeeding to the See also: property of his See also: cousin, the last See also: Earl Harcourt, in 1831.1 The subject
1 William, 3rd and last Earl Harcourt (1743–1830), who succeeded his See also: brother in the title, was a soldier who distinguished him-self in the See also: American War of Independence by capturing General See also: Charles
See also: Lee, and commanded the
See also: British forces in See also: Flanders in 1794, eventually becoming a See also: field-marshal
.
He was a son of
See also: Simon, 1st earl (1714–1777), created viscount and earl in 1749, a soldier, and from 1772 to 1777 See also: viceroy of See also: Ireland, who was See also: grandson and heir of Simon, Viscount Harcourt (1661–1727), lord chancellor—the " trimming Harcourt " of Swift—the purchaser of the Nuneham-Courtney estates in See also: Oxfordshire, and son of See also: Sir See also: Philip Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt
.
The knights of Stanton Harcourt, from the 13th century onwards, traced their descent to the Norman de Harcourts, a branch of that
See also: family having come over with the Conqueror; and the See also: pedigree claims to go back to See also: Bernard of See also: Saxony, who in 876 acquired the lordships of Harcourt, Castleville and Beauficel in See also: Normandy
.
Viscount Harcourt's second son Simon, who was See also: father of the 1st earl, was also father of Martha, who married See also: George
of this biography was therefore born a Vernon, and by his connexion with the old families of Vernon and Harcourt was related to many of the See also: great English houses, a fact which gave him no little See also: pride
.
Indeed, in later See also: life his descent from the Plantagenets' was a subject of some banter on the See also: part of his See also: political opponents
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He was educated at Trinity See also: College, Cambridge, graduating with first-class honours in the classical tripos in 1851
.
He was called to the See also: bar in 1854, became a Q.C. in 1866, and was appointed See also: Whewell professor of inter-See also: national See also: law, Cambridge, 1869
.
He quickly made his mark in See also: London society as a brilliant talker; he contributed largely to the Saturday Review, and wrote some famous letters (1862) to The Times over the signature of " Historicus," in opposition to the recognition of the See also: Southern States as belligerents in the American See also: Civil War
.
He entered parliament as Liberal member for Oxford, and sat from 1868 to 188o, when, upon seeking re-election after acceptance of office, he was defeated by Mr See also: Hall
.
A seat was, however, found for him at See also: Derby, by the voluntary retirement of Mr See also: Plimsoll, and he continued to represent that constituency until 1895, when, having been defeated at the general election, he found a seat in West See also: Monmouthshire
.
He was appointed See also: solicitor-general and knighted in 1873; and, although he had not shown himself a very strenuous supporter of Mr Gladstone during that statesman's exclusion from power, he became secretary of See also: state for the home department on the return of the Liberals to office in 1880
.
His name was connected at that See also: time with the passing of the Ground See also: Game See also: Act (188o), the Arms (Ireland) Act (1881), and the See also: Explosives Act (1883)
.
As home secretary at the time of the See also: dynamite outrages he had to take up a See also: firm attitude, and the Explosives Act was passed through all its stages in the shortest time on record
.
Moreover, as champion of law and See also: order against the attacks of the Parnellites, his vigorous speeches brought him constantly into conflict with the Irish members
.
In 1884 he introduced an abortive See also: bill for unifying the municipal administration of London
.
He was indeed at that time recognized as one of the ablest and most effective leaders of the Liberal party; and when, after a brief See also: interval in 1885, Mr Gladstone returned to office in 1886, he was made chancellor of the See also: exchequer, an office which he again filled from 1892 to 1895
.
Between i88o and 1892 Sir William Harcourt acted as Mr Gladstone's loyal and indefatigable See also: lieutenant in political life
.
A first-See also: rate party fighter, his services were of inestimable value; but in spite of his great success as a platform See also: speaker, he was generally felt to be speaking from an advocate's brief, and did not impress the country as possessing much See also: depth of conviction
.
It was he who coined the phrase about " stewing in Parnellite juice," and, when the split came in the Liberal party on the Irish question, even those who gave Mr Gladstone and Mr See also: Morley the See also: credit of. being convinced Home Rulers could not be persuaded that Sir William had followed anything but the See also: line of party expediency
.
In 1894 he introduced and carried a memorable budget, which equalized the See also: death duties on real and See also: personal property
.
After Mr Gladstone's retirement in 1894 and Lord Rosebery's selection as See also: prime See also: minister Sir William became the See also: leader of the Liberal party in the See also: House of See also: Commons, but it was never probable that he would See also: work comfortably in the new conditions
.
His title to be regarded as Mr Gladstone's successor had been too lightly ignored, and from the first it was evident that Lord Rosebery's ideas of Liberalism and of the policy of the Liberal party were not those of Sir William Harcourt . Their differences were patched up from time to time, but the Venables Vernon, ofSee also: Sudbury, created 1st Baron Vernon in 1762
.
The latter was a descendant of Sir See also: Richard Vernon (d
.
1451), speaker of the See also: Leicester parliament (1425) and treasurer of See also: Calais, a member of a Norman family which came over with the Conqueror
.
' The See also: Plantagenet descent (see The See also: Blood Royal of Britain, by the See also: marquis of See also: Ruvigny, 1903, for tables) could be traced through Lady Anna Leveson See also: Gower (wife of Archbishop Harcourt) to Lady Frances See also: Stanley, the wife of the 1st earl of Bridgewater (1579-1649), and so to Lady Eleanor See also: Brandon, wife of the earl of See also: Cumberland (1517-1570), and daughter of Mary Tudor (wife of Charles Brandon, duke of See also: Suffolk, 1484-1545), the daughter of See also: Henry VII. and
See also: grand-daughter of Edward IV.combination could not last
.
At the general election of 1895 it was clear that there were divisions as to what issue the Liberals were fighting for, and the effect of Sir William Harcourt's abortive See also: Local See also: Veto Bill on the election was seen not only in his defeat at Derby, which gave the See also: signal for the Liberal rout, but in the set-back it gave to See also: temperance legislation
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Though returned for West Monmouthshire (1895, 1900), his speeches in debate only occasionally showed his characteristic spirit, and it was evident that for the hard work of Opposition he no longer had the same See also: motive as of old
.
In See also: December 1898 the crisis arrived, and with Mr See also: John Morley he definitely retired from the counsels of the party and resigned his leadership of the Opposition, alleging as his reason, in letters exchanged between Mr Morley and himself, the
See also: cross-currents of opinion among his old supporters and former colleagues
.
The split excited considerable comment, and resulted in much See also: heart-burning and a more or less open division between the section of the Liberal party following Lord Rosebery (q.v.) and those who disliked that statesman's Imperialistic views
.
Though now a private member, Sir William Harcourt still continued to vindicate his opinions in his See also: independent position, and his attacks on the See also: government were no longer restrained by even the semblance of deference to Liberal Imperialism
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He actively intervened in 1899 and 'goo, strongly condemning the government's See also: financial policy and their attitude towards the See also: Transvaal; and throughout the See also: Boer War he lost no opportunity of criticizing the See also: South See also: African developments in a pessimistic vein
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One of the readiest See also: parliamentary debaters, he savoured his speeches with See also: humour of that broad and See also: familiar order which appeals particularly to political audiences
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In 1898–1900 he was conspicuous, both on the platform and in letters written to The Times, in demanding active See also: measures against the Ritualistic party in the See also: Church of
See also: England; but his attitude on that subject could not be dissociated from his political advocacy of Disestablishment
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In See also: March 1904, just after he had announced his intention not to seek election again to parliament, he succeeded, by the death of his
See also: nephew, to the family estates at Nuneham
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But he died suddenly there on the 1st of October in the same See also: year
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He married, first, in 1859, Therese (d
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1863), daughter of Mr T
.
H
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Lister, by whom he had one son, See also: Lewis Vernon Harcourt (b
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1863), afterwards first See also: commissioner of See also: works both in Sir Henry See also: Campbell-Bannerman's 1905
See also: ministry (included in the See also: cabinet in 1907) and in Mr See also: Asquith's cabinet (1908); and secondly, in 1876, See also: Elizabeth, widow of Mr T
.
Ives and daughter of Mr
.
J
.
L
.
Motley, the historian, by whom he had another son, Robert (b
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1878) . Sir William Harcourt was one of the great parliamentary figures of the Gladstonian Liberal See also: period
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He was essentially an aristocratic type of See also: late 19th century Whig, with a remarkable capacity for popular See also: campaign fighting
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He had been, and remained, a brilliant journalist in the non-professional sense
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He was one of those who really made the Saturday Review in its palmy days, and in the period of his own most ebullient vigour, while Mr Gladstone was alive, his sense of political expediency and platform effectiveness in controversy was very acute
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But though he played the game of public life with keen zest, he never really touched either the country or his own party with the faith which creates a personal following, and in later years he found himself somewhat isolated and disappointed, though he was See also: free to express his deeper objections to the new developments in church and state
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A tall, See also: fine See also: man, with the grand manner, he was, throughout a long career, a great See also: personality in the life of his time
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(H
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