Online Encyclopedia

HENRY PETTY FITZMAURICE

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 184 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HENRY PETTY FITZMAURICE  , 3rd marquess of Lansdowne (178o-1863), son of the 1st marquess by his second
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marriage, was born on the 2nd of
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July 1780 and educated at
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Edinburgh University and at Trinity College, Cambridge . He entered the House of
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Commons in 1802 as member for the
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family borough of
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Calne and quickly showed his mettle as a politician . In
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February 1806, as Lord Henry Petty, he became chancellor of the
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exchequer in the
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ministry of " All the Talents," being at this time member for the university of Cambridge; but he lost both his seat and his office in 1807 . In 1809 he became marquess of Lansdowne; and in the House of Lords and in society he continued to
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play an active
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part as one of the Whig leaders . His chief
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interest was perhaps in the question of
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Roman Catholic emancipation, a cause which he consistently championed, but he sympathized also with the advocates of the abolition of the slave-trade and with the cause of popular
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education . Lansdowne, who had succeeded his cousin, Francis Thomas Fitzmaurice, as 4th
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earl of
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Kerry in 1818, took office with Canning in May 1827 and was secretary for home affairs from July of that
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year until
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January 1828; he was lord president of the council under Earl Grey and then under Lord Melbourne from November 1830 to August 1841, with the exception of the few months in 1835 when
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Sir Robert Peel was prime minister . He held the same office during the whole of Lord John Russell's ministry (1846-1852), and, having declined to become prime minister, sat in the cabinets of Lord Aberdeen and of Lord Palmerston, but without office . In 1857 he refused the offer of a dukedom, and he died on the 31st of January 1863 . Lansdowne's social influence and
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political moderation made him one of the most powerful Whig statesmen of the time; he was frequently consulted by Queen Victoria on matters of moment, and his long official experience made his counsel invaluable to his party . He married Louisa (1785-1851), daughter of the and earl of
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Ilchester, and was succeeded by his son Henry, the 4th marquess (1816-1866) . The latter, who was member of parliament for Caine for twenty years and chairman of the
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Great Western railway, married for his second wife Emily (1819-1895), daughter of the comte de Flahaut de la Billarderie, a lady who became Baroness Nairne in her own right in 1867 . By her he had two sons, the 5th marquess and Lord Edmond Fitzmaurice (Baron Fitzmaurice of Leigh) .

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