William Gerard Hamilton Explained

William Gerard Hamilton
Native Name:instead.-->
Constituency:Haslemere (1790–1796)
Wilton (1780–1790)
Wareham (1774–1780)
Old Sarum (1768–1774)
Pontefract (1761–1768)
Petersfield (1754–1761)
Term Start:1754
Term End:1796
Term Start2:1763
Term End2:1784
Successor2:John Foster
Term Start3:1761
Term End3:1764
Term Start4:1761
Term End4:1768
Birth Date:28 January 1729
Death Date:16 July 1796 (aged 67)
Mawards:is not set -->
Awards:is not set -->

William Gerard Hamilton (28 January 172916 July 1796), was an English statesman and Irish politician, popularly known as "Single Speech Hamilton".

Biography

He was born in London, the son of William Hamilton, a Scottish bencher of Lincoln's Inn, and succeeded his father in 1754. He was educated at Winchester, Lincoln's Inn and Oriel College, Oxford. With his father's fortune he entered political life and became Member of Parliament for Petersfield in Hampshire. His maiden speech, delivered on 13 November 1755, during the debate on the address, which excited Horace Walpole's admiration, is generally supposed to have been his only effort in the House of Commons. But the nickname "Single Speech" is undoubtedly misleading, and Hamilton is known to have spoken with success on other occasions, both in the House of Commons and in the Irish parliament.

Political offices

In 1756 he was appointed one of the commissioners for trade and plantations, and in 1761 he became chief secretary to Lord Halifax, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, as well as MP of the Irish House of Commons for Killybegs (until 1768) and English MP for Pontefract.

He was appointed Irish Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1763, and subsequently filled various other administrative offices. Hamilton was thought very highly of by Samuel Johnson, and it is certain that he was strongly opposed to the British taxation of America. He was close to the Prince Regent, serving as a trusted adviser. In 1784 he exchanged his office as Chancellor of the Exchequer for a pension of £2,000 p.a. Hamilton had held the office for over 20 years, although had treated the role as a largely ceremonial position. He was succeeded by John Foster, who went on to bring in changes credited with greatly boosting the rural Irish economy.[1]

Ill health and death

He suffered from a severe paralytic stroke in the winter of 1791–92. This had not been his first, and by August 1792 he remained in a poor state. On 4 March 1793 he received a leave of absence from the House of Commons due to his ill health. He died in London on 16 July 1796, and was buried in the chancel vault of St Martins-in-the-Fields. His death came "just in time to save him from absolute poverty."[2] He was unmarried.

Two of his speeches in the Irish House of Commons, and some other miscellaneous works—including previously unpublished notes on the Corn Laws by Johnson—were published by Edmond Malone after his death under the title Parliamentary Logick.

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=b68UBQAAQBAJ&dq=grattan+junta+1783&pg=PA75 Ireland: A History from the Twelfth Century to the Present Day p.75
  2. http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1790-1820/member/hamilton-william-gerard-1729-96 HAMILTON, William Gerard (1729-96), of Hampton Court, Mdx., The History of Parliament