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Sir Robert Peel

 
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Sir Robert Peel, Prime Minister of Great Britain / Political Figure

Sir Robert Peel
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  • Born: 5 February 1788
  • Birthplace: Bury, England
  • Died: 2 July 1850 (internal injuries)
  • Best Known As: British Prime Minister and "father of modern policing"

Robert Peel entered politics in 1809 as a member of the House of Commons. Although he had fought against Catholic rights in Ireland for nearly two decades, he was forced to support the Catholic Emancipation Act in 1829, the same year he began to reform England's police force (who became known as "peelers" or "bobbies"). By 1834 he had risen to Prime Minister, appointed by King William IV. Because of intense political opposition, he was forced to resign in 1835, but he regained the post in 1841. After the potato blight of 1845, Peel repealed the Corn Laws, removing duties of imported corn in an effort to help the starving Irish. The move was unpopular even within his own party, and he was again forced to resign in 1846. He died from injuries after falling off a horse in 1850.

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:

Sir Robert 2nd Baronet Peel

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Sir Robert Peel, detail of an oil painting by John Linnell, 1838; in the National Portrait Gallery, …
(click to enlarge)
Sir Robert Peel, detail of an oil painting by John Linnell, 1838; in the National Portrait Gallery, … (credit: Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery, London)
(born Feb. 5, 1788, Bury, Lancashire, Eng. — died July 2, 1850, London) British prime minister (1834 – 35, 1841 – 46) and principal founder of the Conservative Party. A member of Parliament from 1809, Peel served as chief secretary for Ireland (1812 – 18) and resisted efforts to admit Catholics to Parliament. As home secretary (1822 – 27, 1828 – 30), he reorganized England's criminal code. He established London's first disciplined police force, whose members were nicknamed after him "bobbies" or "peelers." After a brief first term as prime minister, Peel led the newly formed Conservative Party to a strong victory in the 1841 elections and became prime minister again. He imposed an income tax, reorganized the Bank of England, and initiated reforms in Ireland. Favouring reduced tariffs on imports, he repealed the Corn Laws, which caused his government to fall, but he continued to support free-trade principles in Parliament. He was the chief architect of the mid-Victorian age of stability and prosperity that he did not live to see.

For more information on Sir Robert 2nd Baronet Peel, visit Britannica.com.

Gale Encyclopedia of Biography:

Sir Robert Peel

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The English statesman Sir Robert Peel (1788-1850) served as prime minister during 1834-1835 and 1841-1846. He played an important role in modernizing the British government's social and economic policies and sponsored the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846.

Sir Robert Peel was in the great tradition of 19th-century administrative reformers. Though not a doctrinaire, he drew on the most advanced thinking of his day in his reform of British criminal law, the prisons, the police, and fiscal and economic policies. By making government a positive instrument in social reform and by his pragmatic approach to social and political problems, Peel also made an important contribution to shaping the philosophy of the modern Conservative party. Despite the fact that his repeal of the Corn Laws broke his party, Peelite traditions lingered on. Peelites such as William Gladstone also carried these traditions into the Liberal party.

Robert Peel was born on Feb. 5, 1788, at Chamber Hall, Bury, Lancashire, close to the cotton mills that had made his father's immense fortune. The elder Peel had become one of the greatest manufacturers in England. He was not, however, content with business success. In 1790 he bought a great agricultural estate in Staffordshire, and in the same year he entered Parliament for the neighboring borough of Tamworth, where he had also acquired property and parliamentary influence. The younger Peel was brought up as a country gentleman. In 1800 his father was made a baronet, the title his son later inherited.

Sir Robert intended his son for the governing class, and he gave him an aristocratic education at Harrow and at Christ Church, Oxford. At both institutions the younger Peel distinguished himself as a scholar. Oxford was only commencing to offer the opportunity for a rigorous education, and Peel chose the harder path. He was the first scholar in the history of the university to graduate with first-class honors both in the classics and in mathematics.

Early Political Career

In 1809, the year after his graduation from Oxford, Peel's father bought him entry into Parliament for the borough of Cashel in Ireland. His maiden speech in the House of Commons was generally acclaimed. The next year, at the age of 22, Peel joined the government as undersecretary for war and the colonies.

Peel's chief at the War Office was Lord Liverpool, and when Liverpool became prime minister in 1812, he offered his young subordinate the critical post of chief secretary for Ireland. Though the office did not carry a Cabinet seat, it was one of the most challenging the government had to offer. After the English union with Ireland in 1801, the chief secretary had become not only a key figure in the administration of Ireland but also the representative of the Irish government in the British Parliament. The social and religious conflicts that rent Ireland throughout the 19th century made it almost impossible to govern. Peel achieved the impossible. As chief secretary for 6 years, until 1818, he established a reputation for a happy mixture of firmness and compassion. Among other reforms, Peel pioneered in the establishment of a permanent Irish police force and laid the foundations for famine relief.

After his retirement from the chief secretaryship, Peel stayed out of office for 4 years. He remained, however, one of the government's most distinguished supporters on the back benches. In 1817 Oxford had conferred on him its highest honor by electing him to one of the university's two parliamentary seats. In 1819 Peel chaired the committee of the House of Commons that made the crucial recommendation that Britain return to the gold standard, and the statute that accomplished this was commonly known as "Peel's Act." It was also during this period that Peel made a singularly happy marriage with society belle Julia Floyd.

Home Secretary

In 1821 Peel was recalled to high office as home secretary in Lord Liverpool's government. He remained in that office, with one brief interlude in 1827-1828, until 1830. In large part because of him, this period is known as the "age of liberal Toryism." Benthamite and evangelical reformers had long argued against Britain's legal and penal system which attempted little more than frightening citizens not to commit crimes. Peel went a long way toward meeting their demands by establishing a system aimed at preventing crimes and at reforming criminals rather than simply punishing them. Savage death penalties for minor crimes were largely abolished, and the criminal laws were made simpler and more humane. Prisons were also reformed and brought under the supervision of the central government. And, in the Metropolitan Police Act of 1829, Peel laid the foundations of a modern professional police force. This act established the London police force, whose members were called, after him, "Peelers" or "Bobbies."

Catholic Emancipation

Though Peel helped to introduce liberal elements into Toryism, he was also long associated with the illiberal opposition to full civil and political rights for Roman Catholics. There were few Catholics in England; but they were in the overwhelming majority in Ireland, and the Catholic question became closely tied with the Irish question. Those who favored Catholic emancipation became known as "Catholics." The people who opposed were known as "Protestants." Peel, a fervent Anglican, became the leading "Protestant" spokesman. He argued that emancipation would exacerbate the already bitter feelings between Roman Catholics and Protestants in Ireland and that it would weaken the established Anglican Church in both countries. It was largely for his stand on this topic that Peel refused to join the government of the "Catholic" Tory George Canning in 1827. In 1829, however, as home secretary and leader of the House of Commons in the government of the Duke of Wellington, Peel played a leading role in carrying Catholic emancipation. The reason for his reversal was simple. In 1828 the Irish had demonstrated their ability to return Roman Catholic members to a House of Commons in which they could not legally sit. Wellington argued that to enforce the law would mean civil war. Peel agreed with him. The specter of civil war overcame their scruples. They felt that it was their duty to King and to country to avert that disaster by carrying emancipation. By so doing they splintered the Tory party. Peel particularly was denounced as a turncoat, and strongly "Protestant" Oxford humiliated him by defeating him for reelection.

Peel's First Ministry

Peel was deeply wounded. About this time he began commonly to be described as cold and haughty. However, his reputation among his close friends was very different. Strikingly tall and handsome, with curly red hair, he was a plesant and jovial companion. In his immediate circle, he was much loved. He had always been sensitive and shy with strangers, and his experiences in 1829 only increased these tendencies; Peel retreated behind a cold and reserved exterior.

Attacked by some of its own former supporters and under pressure from the advocates of parliamentary reform, the government of Wellington and Peel staggered to its dissolution late in 1830. Its place was taken by the Whig administration of Lord Grey of Reform Bill fame. Peel led the battle against the bill in the Commons, but it became law in 1832. For a brief period in 1834-1835 the King quarreled with his Whig ministers and called on Peel to head a Tory government. But the King could no longer appoint whom he wished to office, and Peel's government was soon defeated by a hostile majority in the Commons and by the electorate in 1835. Peel's first government is notable mainly in that it allowed him to redefine Tory goals, particularly in the Tamworth Manifesto, which he issued to his constituents on the eve of the general election. On behalf of what he now called the Conservative party, Peel accepted the Reform Act and its implications and pledged constructive reforms that would strengthen the basic institutions of the country. And though he was in opposition, Peel came to play a dominating role in the years after 1835 as Whig support in Parliament and in the country steadily diminished. The government of Lord Melbourne came to exist largely on Peel's sufferance. Hence the great reforms of the period, particularly municipal and Church reforms, bore Peel's imprint and filled in the outlines of the Tamworth Manifesto.

The Great Years

Peel might easily have come to power in 1839 had not his coldness offended the young Queen Victoria. By 1841, however, the Whig government had reached the end of the road, and the Queen was forced to accept Peel as her prime minister. The greatest achievement of Peel's ministry was to establish the principle of free trade. The best economic thought of the day favored it, and the academics were backed by the vociferous demands of the industrial middle classes. Peel favored it because he thought it was in the best interests of the country. He felt that free trade would bring prosperity to manufacturers and increased employment to the working classes, and that it would lower the cost of living. Gradually from 1842 onward trade was freed, and by 1845 the only outstanding anomaly in the system was the protection of agriculture afforded by the Corn Laws. These laws were ardently supported by Tory squires, who composed a large section of Peel's support in Parliament. Peel was therefore not anxious to press this issue, but he was ready to do so if the Corn Laws caused real suffering. In the autumn of 1845 the Irish potato crop rotted in the ground. There was not enough grain in the British Isles to fill the need. The alternatives were quite simply repeal of the Corn Laws or starvation. Peel would have preferred the Whigs to carry repeal, but they would not. He therefore did it himself in 1846. Once more he was denounced as a traitor, and the party broke apart. Again Peel had done his duty to Queen and to country, knowing full well that in so doing he was probably ending his brilliant political career.

This time it was the end. For 4 years after 1846 Peel remained active and influential as the leader of a loyal Peelite remnant of his party. But on July 2, 1850, he died following a riding accident, and his great career was ended.

Further Reading

Norman Gash is engaged on a modern biography of Peel, only the first volume of which has been completed: Mr. Secretary Peel: The Life of Sir Robert Peel to 1830 (1961), a superb study. An excellent assessment of Peel's whole career as a statesman is in Asa Briggs, The Age of Improvement (1959).

Additional Sources

Evans, Eric J., Sir Robert Peel: statesmanship, power, and party, London; New York: Routledge, 1991.

Gash, Norman, Peel, London; New York: Longman, 1976.

Gash, Norman, Sir Robert Peel: the life of Sir Robert Peel after 1830, London; New York: Longman, 1986.

Read, Donald, Peel and the Victorians, Oxford, UK; New York, NY, USA: B. Blackwell, 1987.

Peel, Sir Robert (1788-1850). Prime minister. Peel was born into a family which had recently become wealthy through cotton manufacture. He was educated at Harrow and Oxford. When he was 21, his father bought him a parliamentary seat for the Irish borough of Cashel. He was widely seen as an able man and in June 1809 became under-secretary for war and colonies. In 1812 he became chief secretary for Ireland. He had a strong physique but by 1818 overwork had impaired his health and he resigned. In 1822 Peel became home secretary in Liverpool's government. He introduced several important measures, including far-reaching reform of the criminal law and the creation of the Metropolitan Police. He also distinguished himself as a leading opponent of catholic emancipation, increasing his status with many Tories in and out of Parliament. He left office in 1827, refusing to serve under Canning, who supported catholic emancipation, but returned after Canning's early death. When Wellington felt obliged to concede emancipation in 1829, Peel skilfully piloted it through the Commons. This earned him the enmity of many of his old admirers. After the Tory government fell in 1830, Peel increasingly emerged as leader of the opposition to the new Whig ministry. He opposed the Great Reform Act, but tried to keep within bounds the enmity of right-wing Tories towards the Whigs.

Peel began to establish a national reputation for moderation, exemplified by his Tamworth manifesto, in which he accepted the Reform Act and committed his Conservative Party to a policy of cautious reform. The manifesto was issued for the general election after William IV dismissed his Whig ministers late in 1834. Peel became prime minister with a minority of seats. In the following election his party gained about 100 seats, but not a majority. The Whigs forced Peel's resignation and returned to office, but the 1837 election brought further Conservative gains. Deepening economic and political troubles brought the Whigs in 1841 to propose a more radical financial policy which involved reductions in tariffs, including the Corn Laws which protected agriculture. Peel then defeated ministers on a no-confidence motion, took office, and dissolved. In the ensuing election he won decisively. Although the country was suffering grave social and economic troubles, he used the winter of 1841-2 to mature plans for recovery and in the 1842 budget scored a major success. He slashed tariffs as impediments to commerce and revised the Corn Laws downwards. Unlike the Whigs, he was strong enough to balance this loss of revenue by enacting direct taxation on incomes. Ensuing years saw further moves towards free trade, and growing restiveness in some Conservative quarters, as Peel's commitment to the preservation of the Corn Laws became doubtful. The Anti-Corn Law League's agitation increased right-wing anxiety. From 1842 onwards, Peel's Conservative critics had warned that free trade policies would fail, but economic recovery by 1845 seemed to confound them. By then Peel was at heart a free trader. In 1845 the potato crop failed, bringing catastrophe to Ireland. Peel determined to take the opportunity to repeal the Corn Laws. He was unable to persuade his cabinet to back him, and resigned, but when the Whigs failed to form a ministry late in 1845, he returned to office. He introduced his repeal measures cleverly, offering concessions to the landed interest, but failed to preserve his position when the aristocratic Lord George Bentinck and the political adventurer Benjamin Disraeli succeeded in organizing protectionist opposition. With his own following among the Conservatives and support from Whigs and radicals, Peel succeeded in repealing the Corn Laws in 1846. At the same time, disaffected Conservatives joined the opposition in defeating an Irish Coercion Bill, in order to bring Peel down. He resigned immediately after this defeat and never held office again. For the remainder of his life he possessed great influence and enjoyed great prestige in the country. His status owed much to the widespread belief that as a minister he had preferred the public good to his own retention of power.

Columbia Encyclopedia:

Sir Robert Peel

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Peel, Sir Robert, 1788-1850, British statesman. The son of a rich cotton manufacturer, whose baronetcy he inherited in 1830, Peel entered Parliament as a Tory in 1809. He served (1812-18) as chief secretary for Ireland, where he maintained order by the establishment of a police force and consistently opposed Irish demands for Catholic Emancipation. In 1819 he was chairman of the parliamentary currency committee that recommended and secured Britain's return to the gold standard. As home secretary (1822-27, 1828-30) Peel succeeded in reforming the criminal laws and established (1829) the London police force, whose members came to be called Peelers or Bobbies. Early in his career Peel scrupulously defended Tory interests, but he gradually came to believe in the need for change. The first sign of a modified outlook was in his sponsorship (1829) of the bill enabling Roman Catholics to sit in the House of Commons. In opposing parliamentary reform he recovered some of the Tory support that he lost by this position, and after the Reform Bill of 1832 (see Reform Acts) had passed despite his opposition, he rallied the party and was prime minister for a brief term (1834-35). In 1834, however, Peel made the election speech known as the Tamworth manifesto, in which he explained that his party accepted the Reform Bill and would work for further changes but "without infringing on established rights." This statement came to be regarded as the manifesto for the Conservative party now emerging, under Peel's leadership, from the old Tory party. Among the able young men who rallied around Peel were William Ewart Gladstone and Benjamin Disraeli. Peel was asked to form a cabinet in 1839 but declined when the young Queen Victoria refused to make requested changes in her household. He returned to power in 1841, however, and the reshaped party attitudes were very apparent in his new ministry, which introduced an income tax and a revised system of banking control, gave aid to the Irish Catholic Church, and attempted Irish land reform. Of far greater importance were the virtual abandonment of custom duties and the repeal of the corn laws. Peel had formerly defended these laws, which protected Tory agricultural interests, but he was impressed by the arguments of Richard Cobden against them and convinced by the disastrous effect of the potato famine in Ireland. The laws were repealed in June, 1846, but Peel's action split his party, and he resigned from office after a tactical defeat within the same month. Much abused as an apostate during his lifetime, Peel is now recognized as a practical statesman of forward-looking views and great courage. His memoirs were posthumously published (1856). His correspondence and private letters were edited by C. S. Parker (3 vol., 1891-99) and later by George Peel (1920).

Bibliography

See biographies by N. Gash (2 vol., 1961-72) and D. Read (1987).

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Robert Peel

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The Right Honourable
Sir Robert Peel
Bt
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office
30 August 1841 – 29 June 1846
Monarch Victoria
Preceded by The Viscount Melbourne
Succeeded by Lord John Russell
In office
10 December 1834 – 8 April 1835
Monarch William IV
Preceded by The Duke of Wellington
Succeeded by The Viscount Melbourne
Leader of the Opposition
In office
18 April 1835 – 30 August 1841
Monarch William IV
Victoria
Prime Minister The Viscount Melbourne
Preceded by The Viscount Melbourne
Succeeded by The Viscount Melbourne
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
2 December 1834 – 8 April 1835
Monarch William IV
Prime Minister Himself
Preceded by The Lord Denman
Succeeded by Thomas Spring Rice
Home Secretary
In office
17 January 1822 – 10 April 1827
Monarch George IV
Prime Minister Lord Liverpool
Preceded by The Viscount Sidmouth
Succeeded by William Sturges Bourne
Personal details
Born 5 February 1788(1788-02-05)
Ramsbottom, Lancashire, England
Died 2 July 1850(1850-07-02) (aged 62)
Westminster, London, England
Political party Tory/Conservative
Alma mater Christ Church, Oxford
Signature Cursive signature in ink

Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet (5 February 1788 – 2 July 1850) was a British Conservative statesman who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 10 December 1834 to 8 April 1835, and again from 30 August 1841 to 29 June 1846. While Home Secretary, Peel helped create the modern concept of the police force, leading to officers being known as "bobbies" (in England) and "Peelers" (in Ireland). While Prime Minister, Peel repealed the Corn Laws and issued the Tamworth Manifesto, leading to the formation of the Conservative Party out of the shattered Tory Party.

Contents

Biography

Peel was born in Bury, Lancashire, England, United Kingdom to the industrialist and Member of Parliament Sir Robert Peel, 1st Baronet. His father was one of the richest textile manufacturers of the early Industrial Revolution.[1] Peel was educated first at Hipperholme Grammar School, then at Harrow School and finally Christ Church, Oxford, where he took a double first in classics and mathematics.[2] He is also believed to have attended Bury Grammar School. While living in Tamworth, he is credited with the development of the Tamworth Pig by breeding Irish stock with some local Tamworth pigs.


Peel entered politics in 1809 at the young age of 21 as MP for the Irish rotten borough of Cashel, Tipperary.[3] With a scant 24 voters on the rolls, he was elected unopposed. His sponsor for the election (besides his father) was the Chief Secretary for Ireland, Sir Arthur Wellesley, the future Duke of Wellington, with whom Peel's political career would be entwined for the next 25 years. Peel made his maiden speech at the start of the 1810 session, when he was chosen by the Prime Minister, Spencer Perceval, to second the reply to the king's speech.[4] His speech was a sensation, famously described by the Speaker, Charles Abbot, as "the best first speech since that of William Pitt."[5]

As Chief Secretary in Dublin in 1813, he proposed the setting up of a specialist police force, later called "Peelers".[6][7] In 1814 the Royal Irish Constabulary was founded under Peel.

For the next decade he occupied a series of relatively minor positions in the Tory governments: Undersecretary for War, Chief Secretary for Ireland, and chairman of the Bullion Committee (charged with stabilizing British finances after the end of the Napoleonic Wars).[8] He also changed constituency twice: first picking up another constituency, Chippenham, then becoming MP for Oxford University in 1817.[9]

He later served as MP for Tamworth from 1830 until his death. His home of Drayton Manor has since been demolished.[10]

Home Secretary

The Duke of Wellington, Prime Minister 1828–1830

Peel was considered one of the rising stars of the Tory party, first entering the cabinet in 1822 as Home Secretary.[11] As Home Secretary, he introduced a number of important reforms of British criminal law: most memorably establishing the Metropolitan Police Force (Metropolitan Police Act 1829).[12] He also reformed the criminal law, reducing the number of crimes punishable by death, and simplified it by repealing a large number of criminal statutes and consolidating their provisions into what are known as Peel's Acts.[13] He reformed the gaol system, introducing payment for gaolers and education for the inmates.[14]

He resigned as Home Secretary after the Prime Minister, Lord Liverpool, became incapacitated and was replaced by George Canning.[15] Canning favoured Catholic Emancipation, while Peel had been one of its most outspoken opponents (earning the nickname "Orange Peel").[16] George Canning himself died less than four months later and, after the brief premiership of Lord Goderich, Peel returned to the post of Home Secretary under the premiership of his long-time ally the Duke of Wellington.[17] During this time he was widely perceived as the number-two in the Tory Party, after Wellington himself.[18]

However, the pressure on the new ministry from advocates of Catholic Emancipation was too great and an Emancipation Bill was passed the next year.[19] Peel felt compelled to resign his seat as MP representing the graduates of Oxford University (many of whom were Anglican clergymen), as he had stood on a platform of opposition to Catholic Emancipation (in 1815 he had, in fact, challenged to a duel the man most associated with emancipation, Daniel O'Connell).[20] Peel instead moved to a rotten borough, Westbury, retaining his Cabinet position. Peel's protégé Gladstone later emulated Peel by serving as MP for Oxford University from 1847 to 1865, before himself being defeated for his willingness to disestablish the Irish Church.

Police reform

Sir Robert Peel

It was in 1829 that Peel established the Metropolitan Police Force for London based at Scotland Yard. The 1,000 constables employed were affectionately nicknamed 'Bobbies' or, somewhat less affectionately, 'Peelers' (both terms are still used today). Although unpopular at first they proved very successful in cutting crime in London,[21] and by 1857 all cities in the UK were obliged to form their own police forces.[22] Known as the father of modern policing, Peel developed the Peelian Principles which defined the ethical requirements police officers must follow in order to be effective.

Whigs in power (1830–1834)

Lord Grey, Prime Minister 1830–4

The Middle and Working Classes in England at that time, however, were clamoring for reform, and Catholic Emancipation was only one of the ideas in the air.[23] The Tory ministry refused to bend on other issues and were swept out of office in 1830 in favor of the Whigs.[24] The following few years were extremely turbulent, but eventually enough reforms were passed that King William IV felt confident enough to invite the Tories to form a ministry again in succession to those of Lord Grey and Lord Melbourne in 1834.[25] Peel was selected as Prime Minister but was in Italy at the time, so Wellington acted as a caretaker for the three weeks until Peel's return.[26]

First term as Prime Minister (1834–1835)

This new Tory Ministry was a minority government, however, and depended on Whig goodwill for its continued existence. As his statement of policy at the general election of January 1835, Peel issued the Tamworth Manifesto.[27] The issuing of this document is often seen as one of the most crucial points at which the Tories became the Conservative Party.[28] In it he pledged that the Conservatives would endorse modest reform, but the Whigs instead formed a compact with Daniel O'Connell's Irish Radical members to repeatedly defeat the government on various bills.[29] Eventually Peel's ministry resigned out of frustration and the Whigs under Lord Melbourne returned to power.[30] The only real achievements of Peel's first administration was a commission to review the governance of the Church of England. This ecclesiastical commission being the forerunner of the Church Commissioners.[31] A further achievement was a rapid gain in seats in the House of Commons which was around 100 seats in the 100 days Peel's Ministry lasted.[32]

Leader of the Opposition (1835–1841)

In May 1839, he was offered another chance to form a government, this time by the new monarch, Queen Victoria.[33] However, this too would have been a minority government and Peel felt he needed a further sign of confidence from his Queen. Lord Melbourne had been Victoria's confidant for several years, and many of the higher posts in Victoria's household were held by the wives and female relatives of Whigs;[34] there was some feeling that Victoria had allowed herself to be too closely associated with the Whig party. Peel therefore asked that some of this entourage be dismissed and replaced with their Conservative counterparts, provoking the so-called Bedchamber Crisis.[35] Victoria refused to change her household, and despite pleadings from the Duke of Wellington, relied on assurances of support from Whig leaders. Peel refused to form a government, and the Whigs returned to power.[36]

Second term as Prime Minister (1841–1846)

Economic and financial reforms

Peel came to office during an economic recession which had seen a slump in world trade and a budget deficit of £7.5 million run up by the whigs. Confidence in Banks and Businesses was low and a trade deficit existed.

To raise revenue Peel's 1842 budget saw the re-introduction of Income Tax,[37] removed previously at the end of the Napoleonic War. The money raised was more than expected and allowed for the removal and reduction of over 1,200 tariffs including the controversial sugar duties.[38] It was also in the 1842 budget that the repeal of the corn laws was first proposed.[39] It was defeated in a Commons vote by a margin of 4:1.

Factory Act

Peel finally had a chance to head a majority government following the election of July 1841.[40] His promise of modest reform was held to, and the second most famous bill of this ministry, while "reforming" in 21st century eyes, was in fact aimed at the reformers themselves, with their constituency among the new industrial rich. The Factory Act 1844 acted more against these industrialists than it did against the traditional stronghold of the Conservatives, the landed gentry, by restricting the number of hours that children and women could work in a factory, and setting rudimentary safety standards for machinery.[41] Interestingly, this was a continuation of his own father's work as an MP, as the elder Robert Peel was most noted for reform of working conditions during the first part of the 19th century. Helping him was Lord Shaftesbury, a British MP who also established the coal mines act. In 1843 Peel was the target of a failed assassination attempt; a criminally-insane Scottish woodsman named Daniel M'Naghten stalked him for several days before accidentally killing Peel's personal secretary Edward Drummond instead.[42]

Corn Laws and after

Lord Russell, Prime Minister 1846–1852, 1865–1866

The most notable act of Peel's second ministry, however, was the one that would bring it down.[43] This time Peel moved against the landholders by repealing the Corn Laws, which supported agricultural revenues by restricting grain imports.[44] This radical break with Conservative protectionism was triggered by the Great Irish Famine (1845–1849).[45] Tory agriculturalists were sceptical of the extent of the problem,[46] and Peel reacted slowly to the famine. As realisation dawned, however, he hoped that ending the Corn Laws would free up more food for the Irish.

His own party failed to support the bill, but it passed with Whig and Radical support. On the third reading of Peel's Bill of Repeal (Importation Act 1846) on 15 May, MPs voted 327 votes to 229 (a majority of 98) to repeal the Corn Laws. On 25 June the Duke of Wellington persuaded the House of Lords to pass it. On that same night Peel's Irish Coercion Bill was defeated in the Commons by 292 to 219 by "a combination of Whigs, Radicals, and Tory protectionists".[47] Following this, on 29 June 1846, Peel resigned as Prime Minister.[48]

Though he knew repealing the laws would mean the end of his ministry, Peel decided to do so.[49] It is possible that Peel merely used the Irish Famine as an excuse to repeal the Corn Laws as he had been an intellectual convert to free trade since the 1820s. Blake points out that if Peel were convinced that total repeal was necessary to stave off the famine, he would have enacted a bill that brought about immediate temporary repeal, not permanent repeal over a three-year period of gradual tapering-off of duties.

The historian Boyd Hilton argues Peel knew from 1844 he was going to be deposed as Conservative leader—many of his MPs had taken to voting against him and the rupture within the party between liberals and paternalist which had been so damaging in the 1820s, but masked by the issue of reform in the 1830s was brought to the surface over the Corn Laws. Hilton's hypothesis is that Peel wished to actually be deposed on a liberal issue so that he might later lead a Peelite/Whig/Liberal alliance.

As an aside in reference to the Repeal of the Corn Laws, Peel did make some moves to subsidise the purchase of food for the Irish, but this attempt was small and had little tangible effect. In the age of laissez-faire,[50] government taxes were small, and subsidies or direct economic interference were almost non-existent. That subsidies were actually given was very much out of character for the political times; Peel's successor, Lord John Russell, received more criticism than Peel on Irish policy. The repeal of the Corn Laws was more political than humanitarian.[51] Peel's support for free trade could already be seen in his 1842 and 1845 budgets;[52] in late 1842 Graham wrote to Peel that "the next change in the Corn Laws must be to an open trade" while arguing that the government should not tackle the issue.[53] Speaking to the cabinet in 1844, Peel argued that the choice was maintenance of the 1842 Corn Law or total repeal.[54] Despite all of Peel's efforts, his reform programs had little effect on the situation in Ireland.[55]

Later career and death

He did retain a hard core of supporters however, known as Peelites,[56] and at one point in 1849 was actively courted by the Whig/Radical coalition. He continued to stand on his conservative principles, however, and refused. Nevertheless, he was influential on several important issues, including the furtherance of British free trade with the repeal of the Navigation Acts.[57] Peel was a member of the committee which controlled the House of Commons Library, and on 16 April 1850 was responsible for passing the motion that controlled its scope and collection policy for the rest of the century.

Peel was thrown from his horse while riding up Constitution Hill in London on 29 June 1850, the horse stumbled on top of him and he died three days later on 2 July at the age of 62 due to a clavicular fracture rupturing his subclavian vessels.[58] His Peelite followers, led by Lord Aberdeen and William Gladstone, went on to fuse with the Whigs as the Liberal Party.[59]

Family

Peel married Julia, youngest daughter of General Sir John Floyd, 1st Baronet, in 1820.[60] They had five sons and two daughters. Four of his sons gained distinction in their own right. His eldest son Sir Robert Peel, 3rd Baronet, served as Chief Secretary for Ireland from 1861 to 1865. His second son Sir Frederick Peel was a politician and railway commissioner. His third son Sir William Peel was a naval commander and recipient of the Victoria Cross. His fifth son Arthur Wellesley Peel was Speaker of the House of Commons and created Viscount Peel in 1895. His daughter Julia married the 6th Earl of Jersey. Julia, Lady Peel, died in 1859. Some of his direct descendants now reside in South Africa, the Australian states of Queensland, Victoria and Tasmania, and in various parts of the United States.

Memorials

Statues

Statues of Sir Robert Peel are found in the following UK locations.

Public houses / hotels

The following public houses, bars or hotels are named after Peel.[62]

UK

Elsewhere

  • The Sir Robert Peel Hotel (colloquially known as "The Peel" [4]), a gay bar and nightclub located at the corner of Peel and Wellington Streets in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood, in Australia.
  • The Sir Robert Peel Motor Lodge Hotel, Alexandria Bay, New York.
  • Mostly in the United Kingdom, numerous streets feature the name Peel.

Other memorials

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 2–11.
  2. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 11–12.
  3. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 1; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 13; 376.
  4. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 18.
  5. ^ Gash, Mr. Secretary Peel, 59–61; 68–69.
  6. ^ BBC: Northern Ireland: A Brief History
  7. ^ OED entry at peeler (3)
  8. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 6–12; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 18–65; 376.
  9. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 12; 18; 35.
  10. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 490; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 4; 119.
  11. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 3; 9; 13; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 66; 68; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 65.
  12. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 2; Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 3; 44; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 103.
  13. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 68–71; 122; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 104.
  14. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 70–71.
  15. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 4; 96–97; Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 26–28.
  16. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 21–48; 91–100.
  17. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 28–30; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 103–104; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 18.
  18. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 104.
  19. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 37–39; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 114–121.
  20. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 35–40; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 46–47; 110; 376.
  21. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 88–89.
  22. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 87–90.
  23. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 123–140.
  24. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 45–50; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 136–141.
  25. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 51–62; 64–90; 129–143; 146–177; 193–201; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 179; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 66.
  26. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 196–197; 199; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 66–67.
  27. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 210–215; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 184; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 12; 69–72.
  28. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 213–215; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 180–182; Read Peel and the Victorians, 68; 86.
  29. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 227; 229–235; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 185–187; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 71–73.
  30. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 250–254; 257–261; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 188–192; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 74–76.
  31. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 224–226.
  32. ^ Read, Peel and the Victorians, 74.
  33. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 417–418; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 206.
  34. ^ Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 416–417; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 206–207.
  35. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 207–208; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 89.
  36. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 23; Clark, Peel and the Conservatives: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841, 419–426; 448; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 208–209; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 89–91.
  37. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 35–36; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 227; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 112.
  38. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 37; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 235; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 113–114.
  39. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 35–36; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 112–113.
  40. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 24.
  41. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 40–42; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 302–305; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 125; 129.
  42. ^ Read, Peel and the Victorians, 121–122.
  43. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 113–115.
  44. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, vi.
  45. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 66; Ramsay; Sir Robert Peel, 332–333.
  46. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 72.
  47. ^ Schonhardt-Bailey, p. 239.
  48. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 68–69; 70; 72; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 347; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 230–231.
  49. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 67–68; 69.
  50. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 70.
  51. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 69–71.
  52. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 35–37; 59.
  53. ^ Quoted in Gash, Sir Robert Peel, 362.
  54. ^ Gash, Sir Robert Peel, 429.
  55. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 48–49.
  56. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 78–80; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 353–355.
  57. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 78; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 377; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 257.
  58. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 80; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 361–363; Read, Peel and the Victorians, 1; 266–270.
  59. ^ Adelman, Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850, 86–87; Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 364.
  60. ^ Ramsay, Sir Robert Peel, 61.
  61. ^ "Sir Robert Peel Statue Bury". Panoramio.com. http://www.panoramio.com/photo/11220446. Retrieved 2010-08-26. 
  62. ^ The UK-based Peel Hotels group are named after their founders Robert and Charles Peel, not Sir Robert Peel
  63. ^ New Pubs Opening All The Time (1997-04-30). "The Robert Peel, Bury | Our Pubs". J D Wetherspoon. http://www.jdwetherspoon.co.uk/pubs/pub-details.php?PubNumber=305. Retrieved 2010-08-26. 
  64. ^ "Sir Robert Peel, Leicester, Leicestershire". Everards. http://www.everards.co.uk/pubs/sir_robert_peel_125/. Retrieved 2010-08-26. 
  65. ^ "Sir Robert Peel - Dresden - Longton". Thepotteries.org. http://www.thepotteries.org/inns/longton/sir_robert_peel.htm. Retrieved 2010-08-26. 
  66. ^ The Peel Centre with image of the monument

References

  • Adelman, Paul (1989). Peel and the Conservative Party: 1830–1850. London and New York: Longman. ISBN 0-582-35557-5. 
  • Clark, George Kitson (1964). Peel and the Conservative Party: A Study in Party Politics 1832–1841. 2nd ed. Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books, The Shoe String Press, Inc. 
  • Cooke Taylor, William (1851). Life and times of Sir Robert Peel. London: Peter Jackson. 
  • Gash, Norman (1961). Mr. Secretary Peel: The Life of Sir Robert Peel to 1830. New York: Longmans. 
  • Gash, Norman (1972). Sir Robert Peel: The Life of Sir Robert Peel after 1830. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 0-87471-132-0. 
  • Ramsay, Anna Augustus Whittall (1928, 1969). Sir Robert Peel. Freeport, New York: Books for Library Press. 
  • Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs
  • Leigh Rayment's List of Baronets
  • Read, Donald (1987). Peel and the Victorians. Oxford: Basil Blackwell Ltd, New York: Basil Blackwell, Inc. ISBN 0-631-15725-5. 
  • Stephen, Sir Leslie and Sir Sidney Lee (editors). The Dictionary of National Biography: From the Earliest Times to 1900. Volume XV Owens-Pockrich. Oxford University Press.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
William Wellesley-Pole
Chief Secretary for Ireland
1812 – 1818
Succeeded by
Charles Grant
Preceded by
The Viscount Sidmouth
Home Secretary
1822 – 1827
Succeeded by
William Sturges-Bourne
Preceded by
The Marquess of Lansdowne
Home Secretary
1828 – 1830
Succeeded by
The Viscount Melbourne
Preceded by
William Huskisson
Leader of the House of Commons
1828 – 1830
Succeeded by
The Viscount Althorp
Preceded by
The Duke of Wellington
(caretaker, preceded by)
The Viscount Melbourne
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
10 December 1834 – 8 April 1835
Succeeded by
The Viscount Melbourne
Preceded by
The Lord Denman
Chancellor of the Exchequer
1834 – 1835
Succeeded by
Thomas Spring Rice
Preceded by
Lord John Russell
Leader of the House of Commons
1834 – 1835
Succeeded by
Lord John Russell
Preceded by
The Viscount Melbourne
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
30 August 1841 – 29 June 1846
Preceded by
Lord John Russell
Leader of the House of Commons
1841 – 1846
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Quintin Dick
Member of Parliament for Cashel
1809 – 1812
Succeeded by
Sir Charles Saxton, Bt
Preceded by
John Maitland
James Dawkins
Member of Parliament for Chippenham
1812 – 1817
With: Charles Brooke
Succeeded by
Charles Brooke
John Maitland
Preceded by
William Scott
Charles Abbot
Member of Parliament for Oxford University
1817 – 1829
With: William Scott 1817–1821
Richard Heber 1821–1826
Thomas Grimston Bucknall Estcourt 1826–1829
Succeeded by
Thomas Grimston Bucknall Estcourt
Sir Robert Inglis
Preceded by
Sir Manasseh Masseh Lopes
Sir George Warrender
Member of Parliament for Westbury
1829 – 1830
With: Sir George Warrender
Succeeded by
Sir Alexander Grant
Michael George Prendergast
Preceded by
William Yates Peel
Lord Charles Townshend
Member of Parliament for Tamworth
1830 – 1850
With: Lord Charles Townshend 1830–1835
William Yates Peel 1835–1837, 1847
Edward Henry A'Court 1837–1847
John Townshend 1847–1850
Succeeded by
John Townshend
Sir Robert Peel
Party political offices
Preceded by
The Duke of Wellington
Leader of the British Conservative Party
1834 – 1846
Succeeded by
The Lord Stanley
First
None recognized before
Conservative Leader in the Commons
1834 – 1846
Succeeded by
The Lord George Bentinck
Academic offices
Preceded by
The Lord Stanley
Rector of the University of Glasgow
1836 – 1838
Succeeded by
Sir James Graham
Baronetage of Great Britain
Preceded by
Robert Peel
Baronet
(of Drayton Manor)
1830 – 1850
Succeeded by
Robert Peel

 
 
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bobby
Beatrice Lillie (English entertainer)

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