Early Life:
Politician and British Colonial Officer, Bathurst was born in Gloucestershire,
England on 22 May 1762. He was the eldest son of the second Earl of Bathurst.
In April 1789 he married the daughter of Lord George Henry Lennox, Georgiana
Lennox, with whom he had 6 children.
Career:
He embarked on a political career and was Member of Parliament for Cirencester from 1783 until he succeeded his father as Earl in August 1794. Perhaps
influenced by his friendship with William
Pitt, Prime Minister of Great
Britain from 1783 to 1801, Bathurst became Lord of the Admirality from
1783 to 1789, Lord of the Treasury from 1789 to 1791 and a Commissioner
on the Board of Control for India from 1793 to 1802. He also became Master
of the Mint in 1804 and filled the position of President of the Board
of Trade.
In
1809 Bathurst took charge of the British Foreign Office for 2 months.
In June 1812
he become
Secretary of State for War and Colonies under
the Earl of Liverpool until April 1827. During this time he created the
modern Colonial Office. Bathurst paid attention to monitoring and improving
the conduct of soldiers during war. He defended his government’s
treatment of Napoleon Bonaparte. Although he supported Lord Charles Somerset,
Bathurst was influential in curtailing the former’s autocratic
governorship of the Cape. He was instrumental in the abolition of slavery.
From 1828 to 1830 he was Lord President of the Council under the Prime
Minister then, the Duke
of Wellington. He had been made a Knight of the
Garter in 1817. |
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Sources for this biography |
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Potgieter, D. J. |
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Uitgewery, p. 206. |
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Cameron, T. (ed)(1986). |
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Wallis, F. (2000). |
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