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1ST BARON HORATIO WALPOLE OF WOLTERTO...

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 290 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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1ST

BARON HORATIO WALPOLE OF WOLTERTON (1678-1757)  ,
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English diplomatist, was a son of Robert Walpole of Houghton, Norfolk, and a younger
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brother of the
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great
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Sir Robert Walpole . The Walpoles owned
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land in Norfolk in the 12th century and took their name from Walpole, a
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village in the county . An early member of the
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family was Ralph de Walpole, bishop of Norwich from 1288 to 1299, and bishop of Ely from 1299 until his
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death on the 20th of March 1302 . Among its later members were three brothers,
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Edward (1560-1637), Richard (1564-1607) and Michael (1570-c . 1624), all members of the Society of Jesus . Another Jesuit in the family was Henry Walpole (155$-1595), who wrote An Epitaph of the
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life and death of the most famous clerk and virtuous priest Edmund Campion . After an adventurous and courageous career in the service of the order, he was arrested on landing in England, was tortured and then put to death on the 17th of
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April 1595.1 Born at Houghton on the 8th of December 1678 and educated at
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Eton and King's College, Cambridge, Horatio Walpole became a
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fellow of King's and entered parliament in 1702, remaining a member for fifty-four years . In 1715, when his brother, Sir Robert, became first lord of the
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treasury, he was made secretary to the treasury, and in 1716, having already had some experience of the kind, he went on a
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diplomatic
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mission to The Hague . He
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left office with his brother in 1717, but he was soon in harness again, becoming secretary to the lord-
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lieutenant of Ireland in 1720 and secretary to the treasury a second time in 1721 . In 1722 he was again at The Hague, and in 1723 he went to Paris, where in the following
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year he was appointed envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary . He got on intimate terms with Fleury and seconded his brother in his efforts to maintain friendly relations with France; he represented Great Britain, at the congress of
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Soissons and helped to conclude the treaty of Seville (November 1729) . He left Paris in 1730 and in 1734 went to represent his country at The Hague, where he remained until 1740, using all his influence in the cause of
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European peace .

After the fall of Sir Robert Walpole in 1742 Horatio defended his conduct in the

House of
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Commons and also in a pamphlet, The
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Interest of Great Britain steadily pursued . Later he wrote an Apology, dealing with his own conduct from 1715 to 1739, and an Answer to the latter
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part of Lord Bolingbroke's letters on the study of
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history (printed 1763) . In 1756 he was created Baron Walpole of Wolterton, this being his Norfolk seat, and he died on the 5th of
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February 1757 . His eldest son, Horatio, the 2nd baron (1723-1809), was created
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earl of Orford in 18o6, and one of his sons was Major-General George Walpole (1758-1835), under-secretary for
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foreign affairs in ,8o6 . See W . Coxe,
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Memoirs of Horatio, Lord Walpole (2nd ed., 1808); the same writer, Memoirs of Sir Robert Walpole (1816) ; and Charles, comte de Baillon, Lord Walpole a la cour de France (1867) .

End of Article: 1ST BARON HORATIO WALPOLE OF WOLTERTON (1678-1757)
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