Chief Secretary for Ireland - Biblioteka.sk

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Chief Secretary for Ireland
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Chief Secretary for Ireland
Arms of the Kingdom of Ireland
StyleThe Right Honourable
as a member of the Privy Council
ResidenceChief Secretary's Lodge (from 1776)
AppointerThe Lord Lieutenant
Term lengthAt the pleasure of the Lord Lieutenant
Inaugural holderEdward Waterhouse
Formation20 January 1566
Final holderSir Hamar Greenwood
Abolished19 October 1922
The Chief Secretary's office in Dublin Castle.
The Chief Secretary's residence was the Chief Secretary's Lodge in the Phoenix Park, next to the Viceregal Lodge.

The Chief Secretary for Ireland was a key political office in the British administration in Ireland. Nominally subordinate to the Lord Lieutenant, and officially the "Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant",[1] from the early 19th century until the end of British rule he was effectively the government minister with responsibility for governing Ireland, roughly equivalent to the role of a Secretary of State, such as the similar role of Secretary of State for Scotland. Usually it was the Chief Secretary, rather than the Lord Lieutenant, who sat in the British Cabinet.[2] The Chief Secretary was ex officio President of the Local Government Board for Ireland from its creation in 1872.[3]

British rule over much of Ireland came to an end as the result of the Irish War of Independence, which culminated in the establishment of the Irish Free State. In consequence the office of Chief Secretary was abolished, as well as that of Lord Lieutenant. Executive responsibility within the Irish Free State and Northern Ireland was effectively transferred to the President of the Executive Council (i.e. the prime minister) and the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland respectively.

History of the office

Chief Sectretary's Lodge, Phoenix Park, now the Deerfield Residence of the U.S. Ambassador

The dominant position of the Lord Lieutenant at Dublin Castle had been central to the British administration of the Kingdom of Ireland for much of its history. Poynings' Law in particular meant that the Parliament of Ireland lacked an independent power of legislation, and the Crown kept control of executive authority in the hands of the Lord Lieutenant and its own appointees, rather than in the hands of ministers responsible to the Irish parliament.

In 1560, Queen Elizabeth I of England and Ireland ordered the Lord Lieutenant, the Earl of Sussex, to appoint John Challoner of Dublin as Secretary of State for Ireland "because at this present there is none appointed to be Clerk of our Council there, and considering how more meet it were, that in our realm there were for our honour one to be our Secretary there for the affairs of our Realm".[4] The appointment of a Secretary was intended to both improve Irish administration, and to keep the Lord Lieutenant in line.[citation needed] The role of Secretary of State for Ireland and Chief Secretary of Ireland were originally distinct positions, Thomas Pelham being the first individual appointed to both offices concurrently in 1796.[5]

Over time, the post of Chief Secretary gradually increased in importance, particularly because of his role as manager of legislative business for the Government in the Irish House of Commons, in which he sat as an MP. While the Irish administration was not responsible to the parliament, it nevertheless needed to manage and influence it in order to ensure the passage of legislation.

Chief Secretary Viscount Castlereagh played a key role in the enactment of the Act of Union which passed in the Irish Parliament on its second attempt in 1800 through the exercise of patronage and direct bribery.[citation needed] Upon the Union on 1 January 1801, the Kingdom of Ireland was merged into the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and the Irish parliament ceased to exist. However, the existing system of administration in Ireland continued broadly in place, with the offices of Lord Lieutenant and Chief Secretary retaining their respective roles.

The last Chief Secretary to represent an Irish constituency while in office was Chichester Parkinson-Fortescue, MP for County Louth, who served from 1868 to 1871.

The last Chief Secretary was Sir Hamar Greenwood, who left office in October 1922. The Irish Free State, comprising the greater part of Ireland, would become independent on 6 December 1922. In Northern Ireland, a new Government of Northern Ireland was established, with a Prime Minister of Northern Ireland. This government was suspended in 1972, and the position of Secretary of State for Northern Ireland was created as a position in the British cabinet.

List of chief secretaries for Ireland

This list includes holders of a key political office in the British administration in Ireland. Nominally subordinate to the Lord Lieutenant, from the late 18th century until the end of British rule he was effectively the government minister with responsibility for governing Ireland; usually it was the Chief Secretary, rather than the Lord Lieutenant, who sat in the British Cabinet.[2] Exceptions were the periods from 29 June 1895 to 8 August 1902, when the Lord Lieutenant Lord Cadogan sat in the Cabinet and the Chief Secretaries Gerald Balfour until 9 November 1900 did not sit there and George Wyndham from that date also sat there,[6] and from 28 October 1918 to 2 April 1921, when both the Lord Lieutenant Lord French and the Chief Secretaries Edward Shortt, Ian Macpherson and Sir Hamar Greenwood sat in the Cabinet.[7]

Kingdom of Ireland

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Chief_Secretary_for_Ireland
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1566–1660

Name Portrait Term of office Served under
Edward Waterhouse[8] 20 January 1566 9 October 1567 Sir Henry Sidney
Edward Waterhouse
(second time)[8]
28 October 1568 Sir Henry Sidney
Edmund Tremayne 15 July 1569 31 March 1571 Sir Henry Sidney
Philip Williams post March 1571 17 September 1575 Sir William Fitzwilliam
Edmund Molyneux 18 September 1575 Sir Henry Sidney
Edmund Spenser 7 September 1580 30 August 1582 The Lord Grey de Wilton
Philip Williams 21 June 1584 10 August 1594 Sir John Perrot
Sir William FitzWilliam
Richard Cooke[9] 11 August 1594 21 May 1597 Sir William Russell
Philip Williams 22 May 1597 13 October 1597 The Lord Burgh
Henry Wotton 15 April 1599 4 September 1599 The Earl of Essex
Francis Mitchell 28 February 1600 March 1600 The Lord Mountjoy
George Cranmer March 1600 Died 16 July 1600 The Lord Mountjoy
Fynes Moryson 14 November 1600 31 May 1603 The Lord Mountjoy
John Bingley 1 June 1603 2 February 1605 Sir George Carey
Henry Piers 3 February 1605 10 February 1616 Sir Arthur Chichester
Henry Holcroft[10] 30 August 1616 3 May 1622 Sir Oliver St John
Sir John Veele 8 September 1622 25 October 1629 The Viscount Falkland
George Lane 21 January 1644 April 1646 The Marquess of Ormonde

1660–1701

Name Portrait Term of office Served under
Matthew Locke 1660 1660 The Lord Robartes
Sir Thomas Page 1662 1669 The Duke of Ormonde:
The Earl of Ossory
Henry Ford 1669 1670 The Lord Robartes
Sir Ellis Leighton 1670 1672 The Lord Berkeley of Stratton
Sir Henry Ford 1672 1673 The Earl of Essex
William Harbord 1673 1676 The Earl of Essex
Sir Cyril Wyche 1677 1682 The Duke of Ormonde
Sir William Ellis 1682 1685 The Duke of Ormonde
Sir Paul Rycaut 1686 1687 The Earl of Clarendon
Thomas Sheridan 1687 1688[11] The Earl of Tyrconnell
Bishop Patrick Tyrrell 1688 1689 The Earl of Tyrconnell
John Davis 1690 1692
Sir Cyril Wyche 1692 1693[12] The Viscount Sydney
Sir Richard Aldworth 1693 1696 The Lord Capell
William Palmer 1696 1697
Matthew Prior 1697 1699
Humphrey May 1699 1701

1701–1750

Name Portrait Term of office Served under
Francis Gwyn 1701 1703 The Earl of Rochester
Edward Southwell 1703 1707 The Duke of Ormonde
George Dodington 1707 1708 The Earl of Pembroke
Joseph Addison 1708 1710 The Earl of Wharton
Edward Southwell 1710 1713 The Duke of Ormonde
Sir John Stanley, Bt 1713 1714 The Duke of Shrewsbury
Joseph Addison 1714 1715 The Earl of Sunderland
Martin Bladen and
Charles Delafaye
1715 1717
Edward Webster 1717 1720 The Duke of Bolton
Horatio Walpole 1720 1721 The Duke of Grafton
Edward Hopkins 1721 1724 The Duke of Grafton
Thomas Clutterbuck 1724 1730 The Lord Carteret
Walter Cary
(also spelt 'Carey')
1730 1737 The Duke of Dorset
Sir Edward Walpole 1737 1739 The Duke of Devonshire
Thomas Townshend 1739 1739 The Duke of Devonshire
Hon. Henry Bilson Legge 1739 1741 The Duke of Devonshire
Viscount Duncannon 1741 1745 The Duke of Devonshire
Richard Liddell 1745 1746 The Earl of Chesterfield
Sewallis Shirley 1746 1746 The Earl of Chesterfield
Edward Weston 1746 1750 The Earl of Harrington

1750–1801

Name Portrait Term of office Served under
Lord George Sackville[13] 1750 1755