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John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley

British Liberal politician (1826–1902)

John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley

Summary

British Liberal politician (1826–1902)

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Right Honourable
nameThe Earl of Kimberley
honorific-suffix
image1st Earl of Kimberley 1868.jpg
captionCarte de visite showing the Earl of Kimberley, ca. 1868.
order1Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
term_start110 March 1894
term_end121 June 1895
monarch1Victoria
primeminister1The Earl of Rosebery
predecessor1The Earl of Rosebery
successor1The Marquess of Salisbury
order2Leader of the House of Lords
Lord President of the Council
term_start218 August 1892
term_end25 March 1894
monarch2Victoria
primeminister2William Ewart Gladstone
predecessor2The Marquess of Salisbury
(Leader of the House of Lords)
successor2The Earl of Rosebery
order4Secretary of State for India
term_start418 August 1892
term_end410 March 1894
monarch4Victoria
primeminister4William Ewart Gladstone
predecessor4The Viscount Cross
successor4Henry Fowler
term_start56 February 1886
term_end520 July 1886
monarch5Victoria
primeminister5William Ewart Gladstone
predecessor5Lord Randolph Churchill
successor5The Viscount Cross
term_start616 December 1882
term_end69 June 1885
monarch6Victoria
primeminister6William Ewart Gladstone
predecessor6Marquess of Hartington
successor6Lord Randolph Churchill
order7Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
term_start725 July 1882
term_end728 December 1882
monarch7Victoria
primeminister7William Ewart Gladstone
predecessor7John Bright
successor7John George Dodson
order8Secretary of State for the Colonies
term_start821 April 1880
term_end816 December 1882
monarch8Victoria
primeminister8William Ewart Gladstone
predecessor8Sir Michael Hicks Beach, Bt.
successor8The Earl of Derby
term_start96 July 1870
term_end917 February 1874
monarch9Victoria
primeminister9William Ewart Gladstone
predecessor9The Earl Granville
successor9The Earl of Carnarvon
order10Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal
term_start109 December 1868
term_end106 July 1870
monarch10Victoria
primeminister10William Ewart Gladstone
predecessor10The Earl of Malmesbury
successor10The Viscount Halifax
order11Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
term_start111 November 1864
term_end1113 July 1866
monarch11Victoria
primeminister11The Viscount Palmerston
The Earl Russell
predecessor11The Earl of Carlisle
successor11The Marquess of Abercorn
{{Collapsed infobox section begincontyesJunior ministerial positions
titlestyleborder:1px dashed lightgrey;}}{{Infobox officeholder
embedyes
order12Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for India
term_start1225 April 1864
term_end1216 November 1864
monarch12Victoria
primeminister12The Viscount Palmerston
predecessor12Hon. Thomas Baring
successor12Lord Dufferin and Clandeboye
order13Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
term_start1319 June 1859
term_end1315 August 1861
monarch13Victoria
primeminister13The Viscount Palmerston
predecessor13William Vesey-FitzGerald
successor13Austen Henry Layard
term_start1428 December 1852
term_end145 July 1856
monarch14Victoria
primeminister14The Earl of Aberdeen
The Viscount Palmerston
predecessor14Lord Stanley
successor14Earl of Shelburne }}
office15Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
term_start158 January 1847
term_end158 April 1902
Hereditary Peerage
predecessor15The 2nd Lord Wodehouse
successor15The 2nd Earl of Kimberley
birth_date
birth_placeWymondham
death_date
death_placeLondon
nationalityBritish
partyLiberal Party
alma_materChrist Church, Oxford
spouseLady Florence FitzGibbon
(d. 1895)
children3

| honorific-prefix = The Right Honourable | honorific-suffix = Lord President of the Council (Leader of the House of Lords)

The Earl of Cranbrook (Lord President of the Council) The Earl Russell The Viscount Palmerston Lord Temporal Hereditary Peerage (d. 1895) John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley (7 January 18268 April 1902), known as the Lord Wodehouse from 1846 to 1866, was a British Liberal politician. He held office in every Liberal administration from 1852 to 1895, notably as Secretary of State for the Colonies and as Foreign Secretary.

Early life and education

Kimberley was born in 1826 in Wymondham, Norfolk, the eldest son of the Hon. Henry Wodehouse (1799–1834) and grandson of John Wodehouse, 2nd Baron Wodehouse. His mother was Anne Gurdon (d. 1880), daughter of Theophilus Thornhagh Gurdon. In 1846 he succeeded his grandfather as third Baron Wodehouse. He was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, where he took a first-class degree in classics in 1847.

Early career (1852–1874)

He was by inheritance a Liberal in politics, and in 1852–1856 and 1859–1861 he was Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in Lord Aberdeen's and Lord Palmerston's ministries. In the interval (1856–1858) he had been envoy-extraordinary to Russia; and in 1863 he was sent on a special mission to Copenhagen in the hope of finding a solution to the Schleswig-Holstein question. However, the mission was a failure.

In 1864 Kimberley became Under-Secretary of State for India, but towards the end of the year was made Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. In that capacity, he had to grapple with the first manifestations of Fenianism, and in recognition of his services, he was created Earl of Kimberley in 1866. In July 1866 he vacated his office with the fall of Lord Russell's ministry, but in 1868 he became Lord Privy Seal in Gladstone's cabinet, and in July 1870 was transferred from that post to be Secretary of State for the Colonies. It was the moment of the great diamond discoveries in southern Africa, and the town of Kimberley in the Cape Colony was named after him. Lord Kimberley was credited with the change in British policy towards the independent Malay states that led to the signing of the Pangkor Treaty of 1874, after which British political agents known as Residents were placed in the Malay states as advisors to the rulers.

Later career (1875–1902)

1897}}
Garter-encircled arms of John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley, KG, PC, DL
Photo of John Wodehouse as seen in the Black and White Budget, 16 March 1901.

After an interval in opposition from 1874 to 1880, Lord Kimberley returned to the Colonial Office in Gladstone's next ministry. He was in that office when responsible government was granted to Cape Colony, British Columbia was added to the Dominion of Canada and during the First Boer War. At the end of 1882 he exchanged this office first for that of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and then for the secretaryship of state for India, a post he retained during the remainder of Gladstone's tenure of power (1882–1885, 1886, 1892–1894), though in 1892–1894 he combined with it that of the lord presidency of the council.

In Lord Rosebery's cabinet (1894–1895) he was Foreign Secretary. During this time he signed the landmark Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Commerce and Navigation. Sir Edward Grey who served as Parliamentary Under-Secretary under Kimberley at the Foreign Office portrays him unfavourably as prolix and prone to irrelevant digressions in conversation although concise, definite and clear on paper. However, according to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, "As leader of the Liberal party in the House of Lords he acted with undeviating dignity, and in opposition, he was a courteous antagonist and a critic of weight and experience".

Other public positions

On 5 April 1850, he joined the Canterbury Association, formed to establish a colony (in the later Canterbury Region) on the South Island of New Zealand.

Lord Kimberley took interest in education, and after being for many years a member of the senate of the University of London, he became its chancellor in 1899.

Family

Lord Kimberley married Lady Florence FitzGibbon (d. 1895), daughter of Richard FitzGibbon, 3rd Earl of Clare, on 16 August 1847. They had three children:

  • John Wodehouse, 2nd Earl of Kimberley (10 Dec 1848 – 7 Jan 1932)
  • Lady Alice Wodehouse (17 Dec 1850 – 8 Jan 1937) married Hussey Packe, son of George Hussey Packe, on 14 August 1872. They had two children, Sir Edward, and Florence, the wife of Lt.-Col. Cuthbert James.
  • Hon. Armine Wodehouse (24 Sep 1860 – 1 May 1901)

He died at 35 Lowndes Square in London (now the High Commission of Pakistan) on 8 April 1902, aged 76, and was succeeded in his titles by his eldest son, John. His more distant relatives include the writer P. G. Wodehouse.

Ancestry

Memorials

The following places were named after the 1st Earl of Kimberley:

  • the Kimberley region of Western Australia;
  • Kimberley, a town in South Africa and;
  • Kimberley, New Zealand, a hamlet of in the Selwyn District.
  • Kimberley Road and Kimberley Street in Hong Kong
  • Kimberley Street, George Town, Penang, Malaysia
  • Kimberley Park, Falmouth, Cornwall
  • County of Kimberley, a cadastral unit in South Australia.

Notes

References

References

  1. Swettenham, Frank. (1941). "Footprints in Malaya". Hutchinson & Co..
  2. Viscount Grey, ''Twenty Five Years, 1892–1916'' (London, 1925) p.18.
  3. Cokayne (1892) p. 337
  4. Cokayne (1892), p. 336
  5. Burke and Burke (1847), p. 514
  6. Cokayne (1892), p. 337 ; of Witton Park and Witchingham, Norfolk.
  7. Wroth (1895), p. 137 ; founder of the Norrisian Professorship at Cambridge.
  8. Burke and Burke (1847), p. 515 ; later Brampton Gurdon Dillingham ; Sheriff of Norfolk in 1789, died in 1820.
  9. Burke and Burke (1847), p. 515 ; his first wife.
  10. [http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/manuscriptsandspecialcollections/collectionsindepth/family/mellish/biographies/biographyofwilliammellish(1708-1791).aspx "Biography of William Mellish (1708-1791)"], ''nottingham.ac.uk'' – The University of Nottingham. (Accessed 4 September 2014).
  11. Hunter (1895), p. 978
  12. Crisp (1911), p. 116 ; daughter of John Gore of Bushill, Middlesex.
  13. Bloomfield, Frena. (1984). "Hong Kong's Street Names and Their Origins". [[Urban Council (Hong Kong).
  14. Manning, Geoffrey. "South Australian Names – K". State Library of South Australia.
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