Online Encyclopedia

1ST VISCOUNT HENRY ADDINGTON SIDMOUTH...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 40 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

1ST

VISCOUNT HENRY ADDINGTON SIDMOUTH (1757–1844)  ,
See also:
English statesman, son of Dr Anthony Addington, was born on the 3oth of May 1757 . Educated at Winchester College and Brasenose College, Oxford, he graduated in 1778, and took the chancellor's prize for an English essay in 1799 . Owing to his friendship with William Pitt he turned his attention to politics, and after his election as member of parliament for
See also:
Devizes in 1784 gave a silent but steady support to the'
See also:
ministry of his friend . By close attention to his
See also:
parliamentary duties, he obtained a wide knowledge of the rules and procedure of the House of
See also:
Commons, and this fact together with his intimacy with Pitt, and his general popularity, secured his election as
See also:
Speaker in
See also:
June 1789 . Like his predecessors, Addington continued to be a partisan after his acceptance of this office, took
See also:
part at times in debate when the house was in committee; and on one occasion his partiality allowed Pitt to disregard the authority of the chair . He enjoyed the confidence of George III., and in the royal
See also:
interest tried to induce Pitt to withdraw his proposal for a further instalment of
See also:
relief to
See also:
Roman Catholics . Rather than give way on this question Pitt resigned office early in 1801, when both he and the king urged Addington to form a government . Addington consented, and after some delay caused by the king's illness, and by the reluctance of several of . Pitt's followers to serve under him, became first lord of the
See also:
treasury and chancellor of the
See also:
exchequer in March 18or . The new prime minister, who was specially acceptable to George, was loyally supported by Pitt; and his first important
See also:
work, the conclusion of the treaty of
See also:
Amiens in March 1802, made him popular in the country . Signs, however, were not wanting that the peace would soon be broken, and Pitt, dissatisfied with the ministry for ignoring the threatening attitude of
See also:
Napoleon, and making no preparations for a renewal of the war, withdrew his support . Addington then took steps to strengthen the forces of the
See also:
crown, and suggested to Pitt that he should join the
See also:
cabinet and that both should serve under a new prime minister .

This offer was declined, and a similar

See also:
fate befell Addington's subsequent proposal to serve under Pitt . When the struggle with France was renewed in May 1803, it became evident that as a war minister Addington was not a success; and when Pitt became openly hostile, the continued confidence of the king and of a majority in the House of Commons was not a sufficient
See also:
counter-poise to the ministry's waning
See also:
prestige . Although careful and industrious, Addington had no brilliant qualities, and his mediocrity afforded opportunity for attack by his enemies . Owing to his
See also:
father's profession he was called in derision " the doctor," and George Canning, who wrote satirical verses at his expense, referred to him on one occasion as " happy Britain's
See also:
guardian gander." Without waiting for defeat in the House he resigned office in
See also:
April 1804, and became the leader of the party known as the " king's friends." Pitt, who now returned to office, was soon reconciled with his old friend; in
See also:
January 1805 Addington was created Viscount Sidmouth, and became lord president of the council . He felt aggrieved, however, because his friends were not given a larger share of power, and when Pitt complained because some of them voted against the ministry, Sidmouth
See also:
left the cabinet in
See also:
July 1805 . In
See also:
February 1806 he became lord privy seal in the ministry of Fox and Grenville, but resigned early in 1807 when the government proposed to throw open commissions in the army and
See also:
navy to Roman Catholics and
See also:
Protestant dissenters; in 1812 he joined the cabinet of Spencer Perceval as lord president of the council, becoming home secretary when the ministry was reconstructed by the
See also:
earl of Liverpool in the following June . The ten years during which he held this office coincided with much misery and unrest among the labouring classes, and the government policy, for which he was mainly responsible, was one of severe repression . In 1817 the Habeas Corpus Actwas suspended, and Sidmouth issued a circular to the lords-
See also:
lieutenant declaring that magistrates might apprehend and hold to
See also:
bail persons accused on oath of seditious libels . For this step he was severely attacked in parliament, and was accused of fomenting
See also:
rebellion by means of his spies . Although shaken by the acquittal of William Hone on a charge of
See also:
libel the government was supported by parliament; and after the " Manchester
See also:
massacre " in August 1819 the home secretary thanked the magistrates and soldiers for their share in quelling the riot . He was mainly responsible for the policy embodied in the " Six Acts " of 1819 . In December 1821 Sidmouth resigned his office, but remained a member of the cabinet without official duties until 1824, when he resigned owing to his disapproval of the recognition of the independence of Buenos Aires .

Subsequently he took very little part in public affairs; but true to his earlier principles he spoke against

Catholic emancipation in April 1829, and voted against the Reform
See also:
Bill in 1832 . He died at his residence in Richmond Park on the 15th of February 1844, and was buried at
See also:
Mortlake . In 1781 he married
See also:
Ursula Mary, daughter of Leonard Hammond of Cheam, Surrey, who died in 1811, leaving a son, William Leonard, who succeeded his father as Viscount Sidmouth, and four daughters . In 1823 he married secondly Marianne, daughter of William Scott, Baron Stowell (d . 1836), and widow of Thomas Townsend of Honington,
See also:
Warwickshire . Sidmouth suffers by comparison with the
See also:
great men of his age, but he was honest and courageous in his opinions, loyal to his friends, and devoted to church and state . The Ind Viscount Sidmouth (1794-1864) was a clergyman of the Church of England; he was succeeded as 3rd Viscount by his son, William Wells Addington (b . 1824) . See Hon . G . Pellew,
See also:
Life of Sidmouth (
See also:
London, 1847); Lord John Russell, Life and Times of C . J .

Fox (London, 1859–1866) ; Earl

Stanhope, Life of Pitt (London, 1861–1862) ;
See also:
Sir G . C . Lewis, Essays on the Administrations of Great Britain (London, 1864) ; Spencer Walpole,
See also:
History of England (London, 1878–1886) . (A . W .

End of Article: 1ST VISCOUNT HENRY ADDINGTON SIDMOUTH (1757–1844)
[back]
SIDMOUTH
[next]
SIDNEY

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.