Robert Walpole



         


Robert Walpole
Term of Office: 1721 - 1742
PM Predecessor: None
PM Successor: The Earl of Wilmington
Date of Birth: August 26, 1676
Place of Birth: Norfolk, England
Political Party: Whig


Robert Walpole, 1st Earl of Orford (August 26, 1676 - March 18, 1745) is generally regarded as the first British Prime Minister and is credited with having the longest term of office. Walpole served from 1721-42 -- during the reigns of George I and George II.

Walpole was born in Norfolk in 1676, and was educated at Eton College and Cambridge University. By the time he entered Parliament in 1701, as member for Castle Rising, he had witnessed much political change within the country. Within the Whig party (modern Liberal Party) to which he belonged, he was soon recognised as an outstanding talent. Shortly after the accession of King George I of Great Britain, Walpole became First Lord of the Treasury (since 1721 and previously between 1715 and 1717) - an office still nominally held by the prime minister in modern times - as well as Chancellor of the Exchequer.

British monarchs were gradually ceasing to play an active role in politics, and Walpole's position was strengthened by the fact that the new King had little knowledge of British tradition. It is often claimed that the King spoke no English but recent research has cast doubt on this reason often given for Walpole's ascendency. Walpole was soon able to assemble a small group of ministers who effectively ran the country, as whose chairman he came to be seen as the leader of the Parliamentary government. He also developed a good relationship with the future King George II, and particularly with George's wife, the Princess of Wales, Caroline of Ansbach, thus ensuring he maintained his position when the succession passed to them in 1727.

As "prime minister" from 1721 to 1742, Walpole held the kind of power that has equalled by very few ordinary politicians, before or since, but, like all politicians, he eventually succumbed to the opposition manoeuverings led by Lord Carteret - resigning after the government was accused of rigging the Chippenham by-election. He was created Earl of Orford and was given the house now known as 10 Downing Street, which he presented to the nation to be used as the official residence of future prime ministers. He died in 1745.

Walpole's administration as "first minister" had important consequences. Walpole moved Britain toward a trading economy, where British merchants generated income as shippers and the state from port fees and warehousing. He was also minister during the time of the growth of stock markets, and he saw the personal and political gains to be had from stocks. He was instrumental in getting the national debt transferred into South Sea Company stocks, thereby retiring part of the debt and enriching the directors of the South Sea Company. Walpole's "fall" took the form of an elevation to the House of Lords as Earl of Orford, where he continued to influence the government in the House of Commons for some time. His influence through giving advice to the King was described as being the "Minister behind the curtain".

Walpole's political dealing, and his political power, led to a unification of opposition forces on a scale that had rarely been seen before. He was perhaps the most satirized politician in the entire 18th century. Most notably, after the success of John Gay's The Beggar's Opera, he was often compared with the master criminal Jonathan Wild (most notably in Henry Fielding's work of the same name). Walpole could count Jonathan Swift, Alexander Pope, John Gay, Henry Fielding, and even Samuel Johnson among his enemies.

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Robert Walpole's Cabinet


OFFICENAMETERM
Prime Minister
First Lord of the Treasury
Chancellor of the Exchequer
Leader of the House of Commons
Sir Robert Walpole1721–1742
Southern SecretaryThe Lord Carteret1721–1724
 The Duke of Newcastle1724–1742
Northern SecretaryThe Viscount Townshend11721–1730
 The Lord Harrington1730–1742
Lord ChancellorThe Earl of Macclesfield1721–1725
 The Lord King1725–1733
 The Lord Talbot of Hensol1733–1737
 The Lord Hardwicke1737–1742
Lord Privy SealThe Duke of Kingston1721–1726
 The Lord Trevor1726–1730
 The Earl of Wilmington1730–1731
 The Duke of Devonshire1731–1733
 The Viscount Lonsdale1733–1735
 The Earl of Godolphin1735–1740
 The Lord Hervey of Ickworth1740–1742
Lord President of the CouncilThe Viscount Townshend1721
 The Lord Carleton1721–1725
 The Duke of Devonshire1725–1730
 The Lord Trevor1730
 The Earl of Wilmington1730–1742
Master-General of the OrdnanceThe Duke of Marlborough1721–1722
 The Earl Cadogan1722–1725
 The Duke of Argyll1725–1740
 The Duke of Montagu1740–1742
Paymaster of the ForcesThe Lord Cornwallis1721–1722
 The Lord Wilmington1722–1730
 Henry Pelham1730–1742


1 Lord Townshend served as Leader of the House of Lords during his tenure as Northern Secretary; it is unknown who served in that capacity after he left office in 1730



Preceded by:
Henry St John
Secretary at War
1708–1710
Followed by:
John Howe
Paymaster of the Forces
1714–1715
Followed by:
The Earl of Carlisle
First Lord of the Treasury
1715–1717
Followed by:
James Stanhope
Preceded by:
Sir Richard Onslow
Chancellor of the Exchequer
1715–1717
Preceded by:
Prime Minister of Great Britain
1721–1742
Followed by:
The Earl of Wilmington
Preceded by:
The Earl of Sunderland
First Lord of the Treasury
1721–1742
Preceded by:
Sir John Pratt
Chancellor of the Exchequer
1721–1742
Followed by:
Leader of the House of Commons
1721–1742








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