Secretary of State for India explained

Post:Secretary of State for India
Insignia:Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (HM Government).svg
Insigniacaption:Royal Arms as used by His Majesty's Government
Department:India Office
Member Of:British Cabinet
Privy Council
Seat:Westminster, London
Appointer:The British Monarch
Termlength:At His Majesty's pleasure
Constituting Instrument:Government of India Act
Precursor:President of the Board of Control
Formation:2 August 1858
First:Lord Stanley
Last:William Hare, 5th Earl of Listowel
Abolished:14 August 1947
Deputy:Under-Secretary of State for India

His (or Her) Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for India, known for short as the India secretary or the Indian secretary, was the British Cabinet minister and the political head of the India Office responsible for the governance of the British Indian Empire, including Aden, Burma and the Persian Gulf Residency. The post was created in 1858 when the East India Company's rule in Bengal ended and India, except for the Princely States, was brought under the direct administration of the government in Whitehall in London, beginning the official colonial period under the British Empire.

In 1937, the India Office was reorganised which separated Burma and Aden under a new Burma Office, but the same secretary of state headed both departments and a new title was established as His Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for India and Burma. The India Office and its secretary of state were abolished in August 1947, when the United Kingdom granted independence in the Indian Independence Act, which created two new independent dominions, India and Pakistan. Burma soon achieved independence separately in early 1948.

Secretaries of state for India, 1858–1937

PortraitNameTerm of officePolitical partyPrime Minister
Lord Stanley
MP for King's Lynn
2 August
1858
11 June
1859
ConservativeEdward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby
Sir Charles Wood
MP for Halifax until 1865
MP for Ripon after 1865
18 June
1859
16 February
1866[1]
Liberal 
Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston
 
John Russell, 1st Earl Russell
George Robinson, 3rd Earl de Grey16 February
1866
26 June
1866
Liberal
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, Viscount Cranborne
MP for Stamford
6 July
1866
8 March
1867
Conservative 
Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby
 
Sir Stafford Northcote
MP for North Devonshire
8 March
1867
1 December
1868
Conservative
 
Benjamin Disraeli
 
George Campbell, 8th Duke of Argyll9 December
1868
17 February
1874
LiberalWilliam Ewart Gladstone
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury21 February
1874
2 April
1878
ConservativeBenjamin Disraeli
Gathorne Gathorne-Hardy, 1st Viscount Cranbrook
2 April
1878
21 April
1880
Conservative
Spencer Cavendish, Marquess of Hartington
MP for North East Lancashire
28 April
1880
16 December
1882
rowspan=2 style="background-color: " || rowspan=2 | William Ewart Gladstone|-| style="background-color: " || | John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley| 16 December
1882| 9 June
1885| Liberal|-| style="background-color: " || | Lord Randolph Churchill
MP for Paddington South| 24 June
1885| 28 January
1886| Conservative| style="background-color: " || Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury|-| style="background-color: " || | John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley| 6 February
1886| 20 July
1886| Liberal| style="background-color: " || William Ewart Gladstone|-| style="background-color: " || | R. A. Cross, 1st Viscount Cross| 3 August
1886| 11 August
1892| Conservative| style="background-color: " || Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury|-| style="background-color: " || | John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley| 18 August
1892| 10 March
1894| Liberal| style="background-color: " || William Ewart Gladstone|-| style="background-color: " || | Henry Fowler
MP for Wolverhampton East| 10 March
1894| 21 June
1895| Liberal| style="background-color: " || Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery|-| rowspan=2 style="background-color: " || rowspan=2 | | rowspan=2 | Lord George Hamilton
MP for Ealing| rowspan=2 | 4 July
1895| rowspan=2 | 9 October
1903[2] | rowspan=2 | Conservative| style="background-color: " ||  
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
(Unionist Coalition)
 |-| rowspan=2 style="background-color: " || rowspan=2 |  
Arthur Balfour
(Unionist Coalition)
 |-| style="background-color: " || | William St John Brodrick
MP for Guildford| 9 October
1903| 4 December
1905 | Irish Unionist|-| style="background-color: " || rowspan=2 | | rowspan=2 | John Morley
MP for Montrose Burghs until 1908
Viscount Morley of Blackburn after 1908| rowspan=2 | 10 December
1905| rowspan=2 | 3 November
1910| rowspan=2 | Liberal| style="background-color: " || Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman|-| style="background-color: " || rowspan=4 style="background-color: " || rowspan=4 | H. H. Asquith|-| style="background-color: " || | Robert Crewe-Milnes, 1st Earl of Crewe| 3 November
1910| 7 March
1911| Liberal|-| style="background-color: " || | John Morley, 1st Viscount Morley of Blackburn| 7 March
1911| 25 May
1911| Liberal|-| style="background-color: " || | Robert Crewe-Milnes, 1st Marquess of Crewe| 25 May
1911| 25 May
1915| Liberal|-| style="background-color: " || | Austen Chamberlain
MP for Birmingham West| 25 May
1915| 17 July
1917[3] | Conservative| rowspan=2 style="background-color: " || rowspan=2 | H. H. Asquith
(Coalition)----David Lloyd George
(Coalition)

|-| style="background-color: " || | Edwin Montagu
MP for Chesterton until 1918
MP for Cambridgeshire after 1918| 17 July
1917| 19 March
1922| Liberal|-| rowspan=2 style="background-color: " || rowspan=2 | | rowspan=2 | William Peel, 2nd Viscount Peel| rowspan=2 | 19 March
1922| rowspan=2 | 22 January
1924| rowspan=2 | Conservative| style="background-color: " || Bonar Law|-| style="background-color: " || Stanley Baldwin|-| style="background-color: " || | Sydney Olivier, 1st Baron Olivier| 22 January
1924| 3 November
1924| Labour| style="background-color: " || Ramsay MacDonald|-| style="background-color: " || | F. E. Smith, 1st Earl of Birkenhead| 6 November
1924| 18 October
1928| Conservative| rowspan=2 style="background-color: " || rowspan=2 | Stanley Baldwin|-| style="background-color: " || | William Peel, 2nd Viscount Peel| 18 October
1928| 4 June
1929| Conservative|-| style="background-color: " || | William Wedgwood Benn
MP for Aberdeen North| 7 June
1929| 24 August
1931| Labour| style="background-color: " || Ramsay MacDonald|-| style="background-color: " || | Sir Samuel Hoare
MP for Chelsea| 25 August
1931| 7 June
1935| Conservative| style="background-color: " || Ramsay MacDonald
(1st & 2nd National Min.)|-| style="background-color: " || | Lawrence Dundas, 2nd Marquess of Zetland| 7 June
1935| 28 May
1937| Conservative| style="background-color: " || Stanley Baldwin
(3rd National Min.)|}

Secretaries of state for India and Burma, 1937–1947

PortraitNameTerm of officePolitical partyPrime Minister
Lawrence Dundas, 2nd Marquess of Zetland28 May
1937
13 May
1940
ConservativeNeville Chamberlain
(4th National Min.;
War Coalition)
Leo Amery
MP for Birmingham Sparkbrook
13 May
1940
26 July
1945
ConservativeWinston Churchill
(War Coalition; Caretaker Min.)
Frederick Pethick-Lawrence, 1st Baron Pethick-Lawrence3 August
1945
17 April
1947
LabourClement Attlee
The Right Honourable
William Hare, 5th Earl of Listowel
17 April
1947
14 August
1947
Labour

See also


Further reading

  • St. John, Ian. "Writing to the Defence of Empire: Winston Churchill’s Press Campaign against Constitutional Reform in India, 1929–1935". In: C. Kaul, (ed) Media and the British Empire (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003) pp.104-124online
  • Williams, Donovan. "The Council of India and the relationship between the home and supreme governments, 1858-1870." English Historical Review 81.318 (1966): 56-73. exzcerpt

External links

Notes and References

  1. Resigned after being injured in a hunting accident.
  2. Resigned.
  3. Resigned.