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7TH DUKE OF JOHN JAMES ROBERT MANNERS...

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Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 944 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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7TH

DUKE OF JOHN JAMES ROBERT MANNERS RUTLAND (1818-1906)  ,
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English statesman, was born at Belvoir Castle on the 13th of December 1818, being the younger son of the 5th duke of Rutland by Lady Elizabeth Howard, daughter of Byron's
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guardian, the 5th
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earl of Carlisle . Lord John Manners, as he then was, was educated at
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Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge . In 1841 he was returned for Newark in the Tory
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interest, along with W . E . Gladstone, and sat for that borough until 1847 . Subsequently he sat for Colchester, 1850-57; for North Leicestershire, 1857-85; and for East Leicestershire from ,885 until in ,888 he took his seat in the House of Lords upon succeeding to the dukedom . Melbourne's Whig government had been doomed for some time before it went out in
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June 1841 . The Tories came in with a large majority under Peel, and among Manners's friends who were successful in the constituencies, besides Gladstone, were Smythe, afterwards 7th Viscount Strangford, at Canterbury; Baillie-Cochrane, afterwards 1st Lord Lamington, at Bridport; and Disraeli at Shrewsbury . Cherishing many. of the ideas of the cavaliers of the ,7th century, and full of
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political and
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literary ardour, Lord John was soon prominent in the social
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group which revolved round Lady Blessington . In 1841 he committed some of his loyalist and other fancies to a
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volume called England's
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Trust,-and other Poems, which he dedicated to his friend Smythe, and in which occurred the familiar
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line about "
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laws and learning " and " our old
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nobility." Before the end of this
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year Manners had definitely associated himself with the " Young England " party, under the leadership of Disraeli . This party sought to extinguish the predominance of the
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middle-class bourgeoisie, and to re-create the political
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prestige of the aristocracy by resolutely proving its capacity to ameliorate the social, intellectual, and material condition of the peasantry and the labouring classes . At the same time its members looked for a regeneration of the Church, and the rescue of both the Church and Ireland from the trammels inherited from the Whig. predominance of the 18th century .

Manners made an extensive tour of inspection in the

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industrial parts of N . England, in the course of which he and his friend Smythe expounded their views with a brilliancy which frequently extorted compliments from the leaders of the Manchester school . In 1843 he supported Lord Grey's motion for an inquiry into the condition of England, the serious disaffection of the. working classes of the north being a subject to which he was constantly
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drawing, the attention of parliament . Among other
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measures that he urged were the disestablish went , of the Irish Church, the modification of the Mortmain Acts, and the resumption of
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regular ,
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diplomatic relations with the Vatican . In the same year he issued in pamphlet form a strong Plea for
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National Holydays . In 1844 Lord John vigorously supported the Ten-hours
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Bill, which, though strongly opposed by Bright, Cobden, and other members of the Manchester school, was ultimately passed in May 1847 . In
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October during that year he took
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part in, and spoke at, the brilliant soiree held at the Manchester
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Athenaeum under the
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presidency of Disraeli . A few days later he and his friends attended a festival at
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Bingley, in
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Yorkshire, to celebrate the allotment of
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land for gardens to working men, a step, which, through the agency of his
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father, he had done a
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great
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deal to further . About the same time Smythe dedicated to him his Historic Fancies as to " the
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Sir Philip Sidney of our generation." Manners figured as Lord Henry Sidney in Disraeli's Coningsby, and not a few of his ideas are represented as those of Egremont in Sybil. and Waldershare in
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Endymion . But the disruption of the Young England party was already impending . Lord John's support to Peel's decision to increase the
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Maynooth grant in 1845 led, to a difference with Disraeli . Divergences of opinion with regard to Newman's
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secession from the English Church produced further defections in the ranks, and the rupture was completed by Smythe acquiescing in Peel's
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con-version to
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Free Trade .

Lord John produced another volume of

verse, known as English
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Ballads, chiefly patriotic and
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historical, in 185o . In the same year he wrote the letterpress for an
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atlas of coloured views by J . C . Schetky; and he published several
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pamphlets, one on the Church of England in the Colonies, in 1851 . During the three short administrations of Lord Derby (1851, 1858, and 1866) he sat in the
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cabinet as first
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commissioner of the office of
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works . On the return of the Conservatives to power in 1874 he became postmaster-general in Disraeli's administration, and was made G.C.B. on his retirement in r880 . He was again postmaster-general in Lord Salisbury's administration, 1885–86, and was head of the department when sixpenny telegrams were introduced . Finally, in the Conservative government of 1886–92 he was chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster . He had succeeded to the dukedom of Rutland in March 1888, upon the
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death of his elder
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brother . He died on the 4th of August 1906 at Belvoir Castle . He was succeeded as 8th duke by his eldest son (b . 1852), who had been Conservative M.P. for the Melton division of Leicestershire from 1888 to 1895; and whose wife, as marchioness of Granby, became well known as a
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clever artist, a volume of her Portraits of various distinguished men and
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women being published in 1899 .

End of Article: 7TH DUKE OF JOHN JAMES ROBERT MANNERS RUTLAND (1818-1906)
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