Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Viscount Sydney
Order1:Home Secretary
Term Start1:23 December 1783
Term End1:5 June 1789
Monarch1:George III
Primeminister1:William Pitt the Younger
Predecessor1:The Earl Temple
Successor1:The Lord Grenville
Term Start2:10 July 1782
Term End2:2 April 1783
Monarch2:George III
Primeminister2:The Earl of Shelburne
Predecessor2:The Earl of Shelburne
Successor2:Lord North
Order3:Justice in Eyre south of the Trent
Term Start3:19 June 1789
Term End3:30 June 1800
Predecessor3:Fletcher Norton, 1st Baron Grantley
Successor3:Thomas Grenville
Order4:President of the Board of Control
Term Start4:4 September 1784
Term End4:6 March 1790
Primeminister4:William Pitt the Younger
Predecessor4:New Office
Successor4:William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville
Order5:Leader of the House of Lords
Term Start5:December 1783
Term End5:June 1789
Primeminister5:William Pitt the Younger
Predecessor5:George Nugent-Temple-Grenville, 1st Marquess of Buckingham
Successor5:Francis Osborne, 5th Duke of Leeds
Order6:President of the Committee on Trade and Foreign Plantations
Term Start6:5 March 1784
Term End6:23 August 1786
Monarch6:George III
Primeminister6:William Pitt the Younger
Predecessor6:The Lord Grantham (First Lord of Trade)
Successor6:The Earl of Liverpool (President of the Board of Trade)
Order7:Leader of the House of Commons
Term Start7:10 July 1782
Term End7:6 March 1783
Primeminister7:William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne
Predecessor7:Charles James Fox
Successor7:Charles James Fox
Order8:Secretary at War
Term Start8:1782
Term End8:1782
Primeminister8:Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham
Predecessor8:Charles Jenkinson
Successor8:George Yonge
Order9:Paymaster of the Forces
Term Start9:9 December 1767
Term End9:17 June 1768
Monarch9:George III of the United Kingdom
Predecessor9:Frederick North, Lord North
George Cooke (died 1768)
Successor9:Richard Rigby
Order10:Member of Parliament for Whitchurch
Term Start10:1754
Term End10:1783
Predecessor10:Charles Wallop
Lord Robert Bertie
Successor10:George Brodrick, 4th Viscount Midleton
William Selwyn (MP for Whitchurch)
Birth Date:1733 2, df=yes
Birth Place:Raynham, Norfolk, England
Death Place:Sidcup, Kent, England
Nationality:British
Spouse:Elizabeth Powys (1736–1826)
Parents:Thomas Townshend
Albinia Selwyn

Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney (24 February 1733 – 30 June 1800) was a British politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1754 to 1783 when he was raised to the peerage as Baron Sydney. He held several important Cabinet posts in the second half of the 18th century. The cities of Sydney in Nova Scotia, Canada, and Sydney in New South Wales, Australia were named in his honour, in 1785 and 1788, respectively.

Background and education

Townshend was born at Raynham, Norfolk, the son of the Hon. Thomas Townshend, who was the second son of Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount Townshend, also known as "Turnip" Townshend for his agricultural innovations. Thomas Townshend the younger's mother was Albinia, daughter of John Selwyn. He was educated at Clare College, Cambridge.

Political career

Townshend was elected to the House of Commons in 1754 as Whig member for Whitchurch in Hampshire, and held that seat till his elevation to the peerage in 1783. He initially aligned himself with his great-uncle the Duke of Newcastle, but later joined William Pitt the Elder in opposition to George Grenville.

He held the offices of Clerk of the Household to the Prince of Wales (1756–1760) and Clerk of the Green Cloth from 1761 to 1762. In 1765 he was also made a Lord of the Treasury in the first Rockingham ministry and continued in that office in the Pitt (then Lord Chatham) administration until December 1767, when he became a member of the Privy Council and joint-Paymaster of the Forces. During the ministry of Lord Chatham and the Duke of Grafton he supported the position his cousin Charles Townshend was in with regard to the American revenue program. Townshend was forced out of office in June 1768 by Grafton who wanted Rigby as Paymaster of the Forces to gain favour with the Duke of Bedford.[1]

Townshend remained in opposition until the end of Lord North's ministry and spoke frequently in the House of Commons against the American Revolutionary War. Although he had no close party connection, he was inclined toward the Chathamites. He took office again as secretary at war in the second Rockingham ministry. When Lord Shelburne became Prime Minister in July 1782, Townshend succeeded him as Home Secretary and became Leader of the House of Commons.

Among the matters requiring attention that he inherited from Shelburne was a scheme for attacking the Spanish possessions in South America. A memorandum which Shelburne wrote to him at this time listing matters requiring his urgent attention said: "Preparations and Plans for W. India [Spanish America]. Expeditions require to be set forward—Major Dalrymple has a Plan against the Spanish Settlements".[2] For assistance in planning the expedition, Townshend turned to Captain Arthur Phillip.[3] The plan drawn up by Phillip and approved by Townshend in September 1782 was for a squadron of three ships of the line and a frigate to mount a raid on Buenos Aires and Monte Video, from there to proceed to the coasts of Chile, Peru and Mexico to maraud, and ultimately to cross the Pacific to join the British East Indian squadron for an attack on Manila, the capital of the Spanish Philippines.[4] The expedition sailed on 16 January 1783, under the command of Commodore Sir Robert Kingsmill.[5] Phillip was given command of one of the ships of the line, the 64-gun, or Europe.[6] Shortly after sailing an armistice was concluded between Great Britain and Spain. Phillip took the Europe to India to join the British East Indian squadron, but after his return to England in April 1784, remained in close contact with Townshend (now Lord Sydney) and the Home Office Under Secretary, Evan Nepean. From October 1784 to September 1786 he was employed by Nepean, who was in charge of the Secret Service relating to the Bourbon Powers, France and Spain, to spy on the French naval arsenals at Toulon and other ports.[7]

Townshend was created Baron Sydney of Chislehurst and entered the House of Lords on 6 March 1783.[8] He originally proposed his title to be Baron Sidney, in honour of his kinsman, the renowned opponent of royal tyranny, Algernon Sidney, however he was worried that other members of his family might have claims on it and then suggested Sydenham, the name of a village near his home in Kent, before settling on Sydney.[9] He opposed the Fox-North coalition and returned to political office with Pitt, serving as Home Secretary from 1783 to 1789.

In Canada, Sydney, Nova Scotia on Cape Breton Island (now the province of Nova Scotia), was founded by British Col. Joseph Frederick Wallet DesBarres in 1785, and named in honour of Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney (Home Secretary in the British cabinet at the time). Lord Sydney appointed Col. DesBarres governor of the new colony of Cape Breton Island.

Following the loss of the Thirteen Colonies, Sydney, as Home Secretary in the Pitt Government, was given responsibility for devising a plan to settle convicts at Botany Bay. His choice of Arthur Phillip as Governor was inspired, and Phillip's leadership was instrumental in ensuring the penal colony survived the early years of struggle and famine. On 26 January 1788, Phillip named Sydney Cove in honour of Sydney and the settlement became known as Sydney Town. In 1789 Townshend was created Viscount Sydney.

Although the colonisation of New South Wales was just one among many responsibilities of the Secretary of State, Sydney was recognised as the "Originator of the Plan of Colonization for New South Wales" by David Collins, who dedicated his Account of the English Colony in New South Wales with these words. Collins wrote that Sydney's "benevolent Mind" had led him "to conceive this Method of redeeming many Lives that might be forfeit to the offended Laws; but which, being preserved under salutary Regulations, might afterward become useful to Society"; and to Sydney's "Patriotism the Plan presented a Prospect of commercial and political Advantage". In choosing the name "Sydney" when he was raised to the peerage in 1783, Thomas Townshend demonstrated his pride in descent from the Sidney family, who had been eminent opponents of Stuart absolutism. Sydney thought of himself as a Whig, by which he meant he was opposed to any increase in the power and authority of the Royal prerogative. The name "Sydney" (with special reference to Algernon Sydney, d.1683) was a synonym in the eighteenth century political lexicon for opposition to tyranny and absolutism. It is probable that Sydney was aware of his distinguished ancestor, Algernon Sidney's characterisation of the founders of imperial Rome: “Thus we find a few Men assembling together upon the Banks of the Tiber, resolv’d to build a City, and set up a Government among themselves”.[10] Sydney was responsible for giving the new colony a constitution and judicial system suitable for a colony of free citizens rather than a prison.[11] Phillip's second commission of 2 April 1787 made him governor of a colony with a civil government, not of a penal settlement with a military government. The Governor's commission, together with the colony's charter of justice establishing the legal regime, brought into existence in New South Wales a colony whose inhabitants enjoyed all the rights and duties of English law, where slavery was illegal.[12]

Personal life

Sydney married Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Powys, MP, in 1760. He died in June 1800, aged 67, and was succeeded in his titles by his son, John. Sydney was buried in the Scadbury chapel in the parish church of St Nicholas's in Chislehurst in southeast London, where a large memorial tablet to him may be seen. The Viscountess Sydney died in May 1826, aged 90.

Their daughter, Mary (died 1821),[13] married John Pitt, 2nd Earl of Chatham, but had no children.

Reputation

Sydney's reputation has suffered at the hands of the nationalist school of Australian historians, such as Manning Clark. In his influential A History of Australia (Melbourne University Press 1961) Clark wrote: "Mr Thomas Townshend, commonly denominated Tommy Townshend, owed his political career to a very independent fortune and a considerable parliamentary interest, which contributed to his personal no less than his political elevation, for his abilities, though respectable, scarcely rose above mediocrity." Other writers have portrayed Sydney as a cruel monster for dispatching the unfortunate convicts to the far side of the earth.Sydney can be described, by the standards of his time, as an enlightened and progressive politician. He did not support the American Revolution but was a strong opponent of the war which he thought was pointless and needlessly prolonged during Lord North's ministry. As Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary he was heavily involved in the development of Canada and the settling of fleeing refugees from the intolerant rebels. The city of Sydney in Nova Scotia is named after him in memory of his efforts on behalf of the loyalist settlers of Canada. In a parallel situation for the Royal Townships of the yet-to-be-formed colony of Upper Canada the thoroughfares of the United Empire Loyalist settlement of Cornwall, Ontario were, in 1784, named Pitt Street and Sydney Street in honour of the prime minister and his foreign secretary.

In 1986, preceding celebrations of the Australian Bicentenary, Sydney was honoured on a postage stamp issued by Australia Post depicting his portrait.[14] http://www.australianstamp.com/images/large/0015880.jpg In 1992, a monument in bronze and marble commemorating both the First Fleet and Viscount Sydney was unveiled in Sydney Square, outside Sydney Town Hall by Queen Elizabeth II.[15]

More recently Sydney's reputation has been revisited by Australian historians. Alan Atkinson wrote in The Europeans in Australia (Oxford University Press, 1997): "Townshend was an anomaly in the British Cabinet, and his ideas were in some ways old-fashioned... He had long been interested in the way in which the empire might be a medium for British liberties, traditionally understood." He took the view that convicts should be given the chance to redeem themselves through self-government in penal colonies such as New South Wales. Governor Phillip's well-known statement that "There will be no slavery in a new country and hence no slaves" is an accurate reflection of Sydney's philosophy. Sydney's papers are held by the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan.

Timeline

References

Notes and References

  1. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press 2004: article by Ian K. R. Archer
  2. Brotherton Library (Leeds), Sydney Papers, MS R8, Shelburne to Townshend, c. July 1782. Dalrymple had distingued himself at the Battle of San Fernando de Omoa in 1779.
  3. Alan Frost, Arthur Phillip, Melbourne, OUP, 1987, p.114.
  4. Alan Frost, Arthur Phillip, His Voyaging, Melbourne, OUP, p.114.
  5. Alan Frost, Arthur Phillip, His Voyaging, Melbourne, OUP, 1987, p.114.
  6. Alan Frost, Arthur Phillip, His Voyaging, Melbourne, Oxford University Press, 1987, p.114.
  7. Alan Frost, Arthur Phillip, His Voyaging, Melbourne, OUP, 1987, pp.129–133.
  8. Tink, Andrew (2011) Lord Sydney: The Life and Times of Tommy Townshend, Australian Scholarly Publishing page 136
  9. Tink, Andrew (2011) Lord Sydney: The Life and Times of Tommy Townshend, Australian Scholarly Publishing pages 135–6
  10. Algernon Sidney, Discourses concerning Government, London, 1704 (reprinted 1783), p.66; quoted in Alan Atkinson, The Europeans in Australia: A History, Melbourne, Oxford U.P., Vol.1, 1997, p.206.
  11. Alan Atkinson, “The first plans for governing New South Wales, 1786–87”, Australian Historical Studies, vol. 24, no. 94, April 1990, pp.22–40.
  12. Sir Victor Windeyer, "A Birthright and Inheritance", Tasmanian University Law Review, vol.1, no.5, 1962. A Birthright and Inheritance
  13. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, volume IX (April–August 1821), p. 364.
  14. Web site: Australian Bicentennial: Issue 3, Part 2: The Decision to Settle . 1986 Issues . Commemorative Definitive Decimal Stamps . 1986 . 29 April 2011.
  15. Web site: To Sail, To Stop. City Art. 4 September 2016.