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The Coalitions of 1827 and the Crisis of Whig Leadership
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
Extract
On 17 February 1827 Lord Liverpool suffered a paralytic stroke. His physical disintegration was followed by the break-up of the alliance which he had built and presided over for fifteen years. He had been a living guarantee that catholic emancipation and parliamentary reform could not be passed, which secured the support of the king and the country gentlemen. At the same time, he had guarded the backs of his liberal foreign and finance ministers against the threat of conservative attack, and thus enabled the government to adapt its policies in those departments to the pressures of the post-war world.
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References
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2 Milton (1786–1857), M.P. for Yorkshire, succeeded his father as fifth Earl Fitzwilliam in 1833; Tavistock (1788–1861), M.P. for Bedfordshire, succeeded as seventh duke of Bedford in 1839; Nugent (1789–1850) was a brother of the first duke of Buckingham and inherited an Irish peerage in 1812 but sat in the commons for Aylesbury; Folkestone (1779–1869), M.P. for Salisbury, succeeded as third earl of Radnor in 1828; Ebrington (1783–1861), M.P. for Tavistock, succeeded as second Earl Fortescue in 1841; Duncannon (1781–1847), M.P. for Co. Kilkenny, succeeded as fourth earl of Bessborough in 1844; Lyttelton (1782–1837)?, was out of parliament and succeeded his brother as third Lord Lyttelton in 1828; Russell (1792–1878), M.P. for Bandon, was Tavistock's brother and was created Earl Russell in 1861; and Althorp (1782–1845), M.P. for Northamptonshire, succeeded as third Earl Spencer in 1834.
3 SirWilson, Robert, Canning's administration: narrative of formation 1837, ed. Randolph, Herbert (London, 1872), p. 17.Google Scholar Grey to Holland, 14 Apr. 1827, and same to Fitzwilliam, 18 Apr. 1827, Grey MSS, Department of Paleography and Diplomatic, University of Durham.
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21 Althorp MSS, Althorp to Bennett, 21 May 1824.
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23 Parl. Deb. XI, col. 692, 11 May 1824.
24 Ibid. VIII, col. 1004, 15 Apr. 1823.
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27 Althorp MSS, Richard Bennett correspondence, 1820s.
28 Ibid., Lavinia Countess Spencer to Lord Spencer, 30 Nov. 1825. Fitzwilliam MSS X1611, Althorp to Milton, 22 Jan. 1826. Parl. Deb. XIV, col. 426, 16 Feb. 1826. Althorp introduced die question partly in order to keep it out of Hume's hands, for the latter would have inevitably taken it up and frightened away die moderates. Add. MSS 36461, fo. 385, Tavistock to Hobhouse, 6 Jan. [1826].
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47 Fitzwilliam MSS, Milton to Fitzwilliam, 1 Dec. 1825; Althorp to Milton, 6 Dec. 1825 and 1 Jan. 1826. Althorp MSS, Milton to Althorp, 27 Dec. 1825. Wentworth Woodhouse MSS E237, Althorp to Milton, 4 June 1826 (kept at the Central Library, Sheffield).
48 Parl. Deb. XV, cols. 1410–11, 26 May 1826; XVI, cols. 99–102,22 Nov. 1826 and 676,654–7, 673–4, 26 Feb. 1827.
49 Ibid. XVI, cols. 1187–90 and 1197–8, 15 Mar. 1827; XVII, cols. 675–7, 8 May, 983–4, 25 May, and 1060, 28 May 1827.
50 Althorp MSS, Althorp to Brougham, 18 Apr. 1827.
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61 Broughton, Lord, Recollections of a long life, ed. Dorchester, Lady (London, 1909), III, 169.Google Scholar This comment was prompted by the attacks made by Althorp and Tavistock on the grant to the duke and duchess of Clarence, delivered at a moment when currying to royal favour would have been opportune. Parl. Deb. XVI, cols. 521–2, and 540–15 16 Feb.; 565, 19 Feb. 1827. Grey MSS, Howick to Grey, 22 Feb. 1827.
62 They almost rescinded their good intentions upon die appointment of Sir John Copley (Lyndhurst) as lord chancellor. Lyttelton divided opponents of catholic emancipation into classes: ‘1 Rogues and Hypocrites/2 Boobies/3 Bigots by Education/4 Ignoramusses’. He ranked Copley as a dangerous member of the first group. Hatherton MSS, Lyttelton to E. J. Littleton, 23 Jan. 1826. Brougham defended the appointment with extremely twisted logic, but even Holland was upset. Aspinall, , Formation, pp. 95–6, 99, 116–17. Althorp MSS, Tavistock to Althorp, 25 Apr. 1827.Google Scholar
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87 Parl. Deb. XVII, cols. 589–91, 7 May 1827.
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90 Add. MSS 51675, Tavistock to Holland, 10 Jan. 1828.
91 Ibid. Tavistock quoting Althorp.
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93 The first instance of the term Watchmen that has come to my attention is to be found in a letter by Tom Moore to John Russell: ‘I feel a litde curious to know exactly the colour of your politics just now, as from the rumour I hear of your brother “watchmen ”, Althorp, Milton, &c., I begin sometimes to apprehend that you, too, may be among the fallers-off. ‘Russell, R., Early correspondence, I, 268, 31 Oct. 1827.Google Scholar
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96 Add. MSS 36464, fo. 166, Tavistock to Hobhouse, 5 Jan. 1828.
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106 Russell MSS, P.R.O. 30/22/1A, Althorp to Russell, 2 Oct. 1827.
107 Earl of Lytton, , The Life of Edward Bulwer first Lord Lytton (London, 1913), I, 418. I am extremely grateful to the late Dr G. Kitson Clark of Trinity College, Cambridge, and to Dr David Spring of the Johns Hopkins University for their constructive criticism of this paper.Google Scholar
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