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The Foxite Whigs, Irish legislative independence and the Act of Union, 1785–1806

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Douglas Kanter*
Affiliation:
Florida Atlantic University

Extract

The establishment of Irish legislative independence in 1782–3, once regarded as a watershed in Irish constitutional history, has more recently and quite properly been reduced to an achievement of modest proportions. According to the new historiographical orthodoxy, Irish legislative independence was an aberration in a period of increasing British political control, and one that actually encouraged the British ruling class to pursue the political assimilation of Ireland into Britain by means of a union. Historians now have a tolerably clear picture of the process by which William Pitt and the British executive gradually became convinced that an incorporating union provided the best solution to the constitutional anomalies and sectarian difficulties posed by the government of Ireland in the 1780s and 1790s.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 2009

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References

1 Kelly, James, ‘The origins of the Act of Union: an examination of unionist opinion in Britain and Ireland, 1650–1800’ in I.H.S., xxv, no. 99 (1987), pp 236-63Google Scholar; idem, Prelude to union: Anglo-Irish politics in the 1780s (Cork, 1992), pp 32–75.

2 In addition to the works by Kelly, cited above, see also Bartlett, Thomas, The fall and rise of the Irish nation: the Catholic question, 1690–1830 (Savage, Maryland, 1992), pp 127-8, 169–72Google Scholar; Geoghegan, Patrick M., The Irish Act of Union: a study in high politics, 1797–1801 (New York, 1999), pp 17.Google Scholar

3 Though ‘Foxite’ is most frequently used to describe the opposition Whigs after 1792, the term was already in use by 1784; see Mitchell, L. G., Charles James Fox and the disintegration of the Whig party, 1782–1794 (London, 1971), p. 246.Google Scholar

4 Kelly, Prelude to union, pp 35–51.

5 Cobbett, William, Parliamentary history of England from … 1066 to … 1803 (36 vols, London, 1806-20), xxiii, 337-41 (22 Jan. 1783)Google Scholar, 730–1 (11 Apr. 1783).

6 Ibid., xxv, 674, 686 (24 May 1785).

7 Ibid., 744–5 (30 May 1785).

8 Ibid., 969 (25 July 1785). Earlier in the debate, however, Fox had briefly, and contradictorily, ‘mentioned the circumstance of an union as extremely desirable’. In this, he may have simply been following the lead of his parliamentary ally, Lord North, who advocated legislative union during the debates. See ibid., 660 (19 May 1785); quoted in Powell, Martyn J., ‘Charles James Fox and Ireland’ in I.H.S., xxxiii, no. 130 (2002), p. 186.Google Scholar

9 See the speeches of SirFitzpatrick, R., Erskine, J., Beauchamp, Viscount, and Courtenay, J.; Cobbett, Parl, hist., xxv, 698-9, 727–9, 729–35, 738–43 (24 May 1785).Google Scholar

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11 Fox to the duke of Portland, 1 Feb. 1789 (B.L., Fox papers, Add. MS 47561, f. 101); Fox to Richard Fitzpatrick, 17 Feb. 1789 (Memorials and correspondence of Charles James Fox, ed. Russell, Lord John (5 vols, London, 1853-7), ii, 301)Google Scholar. See also Herman, Neil, ‘Henry Grattan, the Regency crisis, and the emergence of a Whig party in Ireland, 1788–9’ in I.H.S., xxxii, no. 128 (2001), pp 481-2.Google Scholar

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19 Ibid., xxxiv, 209–10 (23 Jan. 1799), 340–3 (7 Feb. 1799).

20 Ibid., 706–8 (19 Mar. 1799); see also Jupp, Peter, ‘Britain and the union, 1797–1801’ in R. Hist. Soc. Trans., 6th ser., no. 10 (2000), p. 205.Google Scholar

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25 Grattan to Fox, 26 Jan. 1797 (B.L., Fox papers, Add. MS 47569, f. 97); Fox to Grattan, 4 Feb. 1799 (Grattati, Grattait, iv, 435–6); Fox to Fitzpatrick, 3 Apr. 1800 (Memorials and correspondence, ed. Russell, iii, 295–6).

26 Jupp, ‘Britain and the union’, p. 205.

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35 They were: Adair, A., Barclay, G., Biddulph, R., Bird, W. W., Bouverie, E., Bouverie, W. H., Burdett, F., Combe, H. C., Hobhouse, B., Cavendish, Lord G., Cooke, B., Copley, L., Courtenay, J., Dension, W. J., Dundas, C., Dundas, L., Fitzpatrick, R., Green, J., Grey, C., Harrison, J., Howard, H., Laurence, F., Jefferys, N., Jekyll, J., Lemon, W., Lloyd, J. M., Milner, W., Mostyn, T., North, D., Plumer, W., Richardson, J., Ridley, M. W., Russell, Lord J., Russell, W., Shakespeare, A., Sheridan, R. B., Shum, G., Smith, W., John, A. St., Stanley, Lord E., Tierney, G., Tufton, H., Vyner, R. and Walpole, G.. This list includes not only committed followers of Fox but also dependants of Fitzwilliam, Lansdowne and the Prince of Wales, as well as the radical Francis Burdett and a few nominal independents who habitually voted with the opposition. Throughout this article, the political affiliation of M.P.s has been established with reference to Thorne (ed.), The House of Commons.Google Scholar

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38 Morning Chronicle, 8, 10, 20, 24–27 Dec. 1798, 14, 23 Jan. 1799.

39 Bolton, G. C., The passing of the Irish Act of Union: a study in parliamentary politics (Oxford, 1966), pp 130-56Google Scholar; Smyth, Jim, ‘The Act of Union and “public opinion”’ in Smyth, Jim (ed.), Revolution, counter-revolution, and union: Ireland in the 1790s (Cambridge, 2000), pp 158-9.Google Scholar

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42 Ibid., xxxiv, 391 (11 Feb. 1799), 670–1 (19 Mar. 1799), xxxv, 70 (21 Apr. 1800), 162–3 (30 Apr. 1800), 169–70 (30 Apr. 1800).

43 Wilkinson, David, ‘“How did they pass the union?”: secret service expenditure in Ireland, 1799–1804’ in History, lxxxii, no. 266 (1997), pp 223-51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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45 Ibid., xxxv, 60, 81, 82–3 (21 Apr. 1800), xxxv, 88–101 (25 Apr. 1800).

46 McDowell, R. B., Ireland in the age of imperialism and revolution, 1770–1801 (Oxford, 1979), pp 59, 612–13Google Scholar; Ehrman, John, The younger Pitt: the consuming struggle (Stanford, 1996), p. 362.Google Scholar

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48 Cobbett, , Parl, hist., xxxiv, 295-6 (31 Jan. 1799)Google Scholar, xxxv, 59 (21 Apr. 1800); Morning Chronicle, 8 May 1799.

49 Locke, John, Second treatise of government, ed. Macpherson, C. B. (Indianapolis, 1980), pp 74-5, 109, 116–17 (emphasis in original).Google Scholar

50 Stanhope, Earl, An address to the nations of Great Britain and Ireland, on the projected union (Dublin, 1799), pp 3, 8Google Scholar; Fox, to Holland, , 23 Feb. 1799, 26 Feb. 1799 (Memorials and correspondence, ed. Russell, iii, 156–60, 161).Google Scholar

51 Cobbett, , Parl, hist., xxxiv, 377 (7 Feb. 1799)Google Scholar, 474–5 (14 Feb. 1799).

52 Morning Chronicle, 7 May 1800.

53 Cobbett, , Parl. hist., xxxv, 891-2 (2 Feb. 1801).Google Scholar

54 Ibid., xxxv, 1008–10, 1031 (12 Mar. 1801), 1238, 1245–6 (23 Mar. 1801).

55 Ibid., xxxv, 1156 (25 Mar. 1801); Fox had, in 1800, made a brief deprecatory allusion to the union during a debate on the war with France; see ibid., xxxiv, 1386 (3 Feb. 1800).

56 Ibid., xxxvi, 952 (23 Nov. 1802).

57 Grey, to Fox, , 3 Aug. 1803 (Durham University Library, Grey MSS, GRE/B16/49A).Google Scholar

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60 Fedorak, Charles John, Henry Addington, Prime Minister, 1801–1804: peace, war, and parliamentary politics (Akron, Ohio, 2002), pp 70-4Google Scholar. The number of Grenvillites has been supplied by Thorne (ed.), The House of Commons, i, 159.

61 Smith, Lord Grey, pp 88–9; Mitchell, Charles James Fox, pp 199–200; Fedorak, Addington, pp 75–8.

62 Ehrman, The consuming struggle, pp 604–6.

63 Ibid., p. 620.

64 Fox to the earl of Lauderdale, 19 Feb. 1801 (Memorials and correspondence, ed. Russell, iii, 325–6).Google Scholar

65 Fox to Grey, 1801 (ibid., 329).

66 Grenville, to Castlereagh, , 1 June 1801 (Memoirs and correspondence of Viscount Castlereagh, ed. the marquess of Londonderry (12 vols, London, 1848–53), iv, 89)Google Scholar; narrative, Lord Grenville’s, 1803 (Memoirs of the courts and Cabinets of George the Third, ed. the duke of Buckingham and Chandos (4 vols, London, 1853), iii, 285-6).Google Scholar

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68 Jupp, Peter, Lord Grenville, 1759–1834 (Oxford, 1985), pp 326-9Google Scholar; Mitchell, Fox, pp 207–8; Ehrman, The consuming struggle, pp 613–19; Fedorak, Addington, pp 183–5.

69 For Grenville’s role in framing the union, see Jupp, Grenville, pp 262–80.

70 Cobbett, , Parl, hist., xxxv, 871-2 (2 Feb. 1801).Google Scholar

71 In any case, he made no further comments critical of the union in parliament or in his surviving political correspondence after taking office in 1804.

72 Anonymous to ‘Dear Sir’ (B.L., Fox Papers, Add. MS 47569, f. 139); Grattan to Francis Plowden (ibid., f. 147).

73 Hansard 1, i, 797 (7 Mar. 1804).

74 Ibid., ii, 87 (11 Apr. 1804).

75 Jupp, Grenville, pp 332–4; Ehrman, The consuming struggle, pp 653–62.

76 Hansard 1, iv, 847 (13 May 1805).

77 The earl of Lauderdale, , Hints to the manufacturers of Great Britain on the consequences of the Irish union: and on the system since pursued, of borrowing in England, for the service of Ireland (Edinburgh, 1805).Google Scholar

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79 Addington had been raised to the peerage in 1805 as Viscount Sidmouth, but in the interest of clarity I have referred to him by his surname.

80 Grenville, to George, III, 31 Jan. 1806Google Scholar (H.M.C., The manuscripts of J. B. Fortescue … preserved at Dropmore (10 vols, London, 1892-1927), viii, 1)Google Scholar; Spencer to Grenville, [10] Feb. 1806 (ibid., 24); Thomas Grenville to Grenville, Mar. 1806 (ibid., 58).

81 Hansard 1, vi, 126–7 (3 Feb. 1806).

82 Diary entry, 13 Feb. 1806 (The diary and correspondence of Charles Abbot, Lord Colchester, ed. Colchester, Lord (3 vols, London, 1861), ii, 39)Google Scholar. For the Dublin repeal movement of 1806, see Hill, Jacqueline, From patriots to unionists: Dublin civic politics and Irish Protestant patriotism, 1660–1840 (Oxford, 1997), p. 265.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

83 Long, Charles to Hardwicke, Lord, 15 Feb. [1806] (B.L., Hardwicke papers, Add. MS 35716, f. 187).Google Scholar

84 Hansard 1, vi, 174 (18 Feb. 1806).

85 Smith, Lord Grey, p. 84.

86 Spencer to the duke of Bedford, 6 Mar. 1806, enclosing ‘Heads for Consideration to make the Subject of instructions to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland on the general outline of the Measures of Government in that part of the United Kingdom’ (B.L., Althorp papers, Add. MS 75901). The memorandum is docketed ‘Copy to Mr. Fox’. The Althorp papers have not, at the time of writing, been calendared.

87 Fox’s note, dated 10 Mar. 1806, is attached to Spencer’s paper.Google Scholar

88 Long, to Hardwicke, , 17 Mar. [1806] (B.L., Hardwicke papers, Add. MS 35716, ff 199–200).Google Scholar

89 Spencer, to Bedford, , 21 Mar. 1806 (B.L., Althorp papers, Add. MS 75905). Spencer had referred to the union patronage obligations in an early draft of the memorandum that he provided to Bedford on 6 March, but not in the final version. See B.L., Althorp papers, Add. MS 75903 for the draft, which is not titled, signed or dated.Google Scholar

90 Bedford to Spencer, 22 Mar. 1806 (ibid., Add. MS 75906).

91 Elliot to Spencer, 26 Mar. 1806, 7 Apr. 1806 (ibid., Add. MS 75903).

92 Spencer to Elliot, 2 Apr. 1806 (ibid., Add. MS 75905).

93 Bedford, to Holland, , 15 Aug. 1806 (B.L., Holland House papers, Add. MS 51661, ff 20–1).Google Scholar

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95 The dismissal of the ministry has been described in detail by Jupp, Grenville, pp 399–410, and Smith, Lord Grey, pp 118–28.