de bene esse: literally, of well-being, morally acceptable but subject to future validation or exception
Arthur Wellesley, the third surviving son of the Earl of Mornington (1735–1781), and his wife, Anne (1742–1831), was born in Dublin on 1st May 1769. According to his biographer, Norman Gash:
"Arthur lost his father at the age of twelve and was thought by his
imperious mother to be foolish and dull in comparison with his elder
brothers, Richard Wellesley, second earl of Mornington, and William
Wellesley-Pole, later Baron Maryborough and third earl of Mornington.
His only talents seemed to be for playing the violin (which may have
come from his father, who was an accomplished amateur musician) and
arithmetical calculation. But these minor gifts were obscured by his
physical indolence and social awkwardness: signs perhaps of an unhappy
and lonely childhood."
In 1781 he went to Eton College
where he was "an unsociable and occasionally aggressive schoolboy who
made little effort to learn." Arthur was removed from the college in the
summer of 1784 and joined his mother in Brussels. After receiving
French lessons he was sent to the Academy of Equitation at Angers in
January 1786. In addition to fencing, horsemanship, and the science of
fortification, there were lessons in mathematics, grammar, and dancing.
In March 1787 a commission was obtained for Wellesley as ensign in
the 73rd foot, a Highland regiment then in India. Family connections
enabled him to be appointed as aide-de-camp to George Nugent-Temple-Grenville,
the lord lieutenant of Ireland. In December he was commissioned as
lieutenant in the 76th foot and by June 1789 had been transferred to the
12th light dragoons. The following year he became a member of the Irish House of Commons for the family borough of Trim.
In June 1791 he was commissioned as captain in the 58th foot, before moving to the 18th light dragoons in October 1792. Norman Gash
has pointed out: "In little more than five years he had held
commissions in six different regiments, though there is no evidence that
he served with any of them. As aide-de-camp in Dublin, member of the
Irish House of Commons, and manager of the family estate at Dangan, he
had more than sufficient occupation. His leisure pursuits were more
conventional: drinking, gambling, and getting into debt. But he still
played his violin and was showing an interest in serious reading."
After being promoted to the rank of major in 1793 he proposed to Lady Catherine Sarah Dorothea Pakenham, sister of Thomas Packenham,
2nd Duke of Longford. The offer was declined by her brother on the
grounds that Arthur lacked the prospect of being able to support her
properly. His response to this rejection was to set fire to his violin
and to give up music.
In 1794 he was assigned to an expeditionary force under Francis Rawdon-Hastings, Earl of Moira, sent out as reinforcement for Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany, in the Netherlands.
During the campaign he earned an official commendation for checking a
French column in a minor engagement in September 1794 at Boxte. He
concluded that many of the campaign's blunders were due to the faults of
the leaders and the poor organisation at headquarters. According to Richard Holmes, the author of Wellington: The Iron Duke (2002), he later recalled: "At least I learned what not to do, and that is always a valuable lesson".
In the autumn of 1795 his regiment joined an expeditionary force
destined for the West Indies. However, ill-health meant the fleet sailed
from Portsmouth without him. As Norman Gash
points out: "This was good fortune for him, since it ran straight into a
channel gale and seven transports were wrecked on Chesil Beach with
great loss of life. When it was sent out again in December it was once
more hit by bad weather and Wesley's ship was one of the lucky ones that
found their way back to England in February 1796." In June of that year
he sailed with his regiment to India.
With Napoleon gaining victories in Egypt, Wellesley was dispatched to deal with Tippoo Sahib of Mysore. At the Siege of Seringapatam in April 1799, Wellesley was ordered to lead a night attack on the village of Sultanpettah. Lewin Bentham Bowring
later described what happened: "The Mysore troops took possession of
the ground, and as it was absolutely necessary to expel them, two
columns were detached at sunset for the purpose. The first of these,
under Colonel Shawe, got possession of a ruined village, which it
successfully held. The second column, under Colonel Wellesley, on
advancing into the tope, was at once attacked in the darkness of night
by a tremendous fire of musketry and rockets. The men, floundering about
amidst the trees and the water-courses, at last broke, and fell back in
disorder, some being killed and a few taken prisoners. In the confusion
Colonel Wellesley was himself struck on the knee by a spent ball, and
narrowly escaped falling into the hands of the enemy."
General George Harris
was impressed with Wellesley efforts during the campaign and he was
made administrator of the conquered territory. For the next 18 months he
successfully stopped his men looting and was congratulated for
persuading the soldiers to respect Indian customs. He was also able to
deal with guerrilla leader Dhundia Wagh, who was defeated and killed in Hyderabad.
Wellesley made himself responsible for the welfare and upbringing of
Dhundia's four-year-old son, who was discovered among the enemy's
baggage.
In April 1802, Wellesley was promoted to the rank of major-general.
The following year he declared war on Sindhia and Berar, the two leading
Maratha states, and in a surprise attack captured almost without loss the great fortress of Ahmadnagar, regarded as one of the strongest in India. He marched his troops 120 miles north-east and came into contact with whole Maratha army of some 50,000 men. Norman Gash
has argued: "His force, reduced by his questionable decision to send
Colonel Stevenson's Hyderabad contingent round by a different route,
numbered only 7000. His men had already marched 20 miles that day and
retreat would have been almost as hazardous as an advance. He took the
bolder course. Guessing correctly that there must be a ford between two
villages on opposite sides of the river, he crossed below the left flank
of the Maratha position and placed his force in a narrow angle between
the Kaitna and a tributary river, the Juah: a position which shortened
his front and protected his flanks, but would have been a death-trap had
he been beaten. The Marathas, under their French officers, skilfully
changed front to meet him, and a desperate battle followed before
victory was assured. Wellesley's right flank advanced too far and came
under heavy artillery fire near Assaye village. Of approximately 5000
men who crossed the Kaitna over a third became casualties, a
disproportionate number being among the British troops. Wellesley
contributed by his personal example to the result. In the thick of the
fighting throughout, he had one horse killed under him and another
wounded."
Wellesley returned to England in 1805 and the following year he married Lady Catherine Sarah Dorothea Pakenham. In 1806 he was elected as the MP for Rye in Sussex. A year after entering the House of Commons, the Duke of Portland
appointed Wellesley as his Irish Secretary. Although a member of the
government, Arthur Wellesley remained in the army and in 1808 he was
sent to aid the Portuguese against the French. After a victory at Vimeiro he returned to England but the following year he was asked to assume command of the British Army in the Peninsular War.
Winston Churchill argued in The Island Race
(1964): "These were testing years for Wellington. He commanded
Britain's sole remaining army on the continent of Europe. The French had
always bent every effort to driving the British into the sea. In 1810
they were massing for a fresh attempt. In September there was a stiff
battle at Busaco. The French were badly mauled and beaten." In 1812 the
French were forced out of Spain and Wellesley reinforced his victory against the French at Toulouse.
In 1814 Wellesley was granted the title, the Duke of Wellington. He was then put in command of the forces which took on Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo
in June, 1815. It was a savage and bloody encounter which lasted from
the opening cannonade of the French guns at 11.30 a.m. until dusk fell
soon after 8 p.m. That night Wellington wrote to Thomas Creevey,
"It has been a damned nice thing - the nearest run thing you ever
saw... ‘I never took so much trouble about any Battle and never was so
near being beat".
One military historian has pointed out: "The French troops, as
always, had fought with immense courage and tenacity. Now, for the first
time in Wellington's experience, their morale collapsed. What started
as a retreat turned into a rout.... On both sides casualties were very
heavy: about 17,000 in Wellington's army, nearly 7000 among the
Prussians, about 26,000 among the French, with a further 9,000 taken
prisoner and up to 10,000 missing or deserted." Advancing rapidly into
France, Wellington secured an armistice on 3rd July and three days later
their troops entered Paris.
Wellington was disturbed by the large loss of life at Waterloo. He wrote to Lady Frances Shelley
saying “I hope to God that I have fought my last battle... Next to a
battle lost, the greatest misery is a battle gained.” Parliament
rewarded this military victory by granting Wellington the Hampshire estate of Stratfield Saye. Wellington purchased Apsley House at Hyde Park Corner. He then appointed the fashionable architect Benjamin Wyatt
to "enlarge and reshape the appearance of the house to make it a
fitting depository for all the war trophies, pictures, statues, and
other immense and elaborate presents (mainly gold, silver, and
porcelain) given to him by foreign governments and public authorities at
home". In 1817 parliament rewarded Wellington for his military victory
by buying the Hampshire estate of Stratfield Saye for the sum of £263,000 (£18,485,712 at 2012 prices).
Wellington developed a reputation as a womanizer. One of his mistresses, Harriette Wilson
(1786–1845), tried to blackmail him by disclosing her intention to
write about their relationship. Wellington famously replied: "publish
and be damned". His most important relationship was with Harriet Arbuthnot (1793-1834), the wife of Charles Arbuthnot, a member of the House of Commons.
In 1818 the Duke of Wellington returned to politics when he accepted the invitation of Lord Liverpool to join his Tory
administration as master-General of the Ordnance. He also served the
role of general adviser to the government on all military matters. After
the suicide of Lord Castereagh in 1822 Wellington took his place at the Congress of Verona. He also played a significant role in persuading George IV to appoint George Canning as the new foreign secretary.
Over the next few years Wellington clashed with Canning over foreign
policy. Wellington, as someone who disliked democracy, thought it wrong
to recognise the independent republics of the former Spanish and
Portuguese colonies. In December 1824, he offered to resign but this was
rejected by Lord Liverpool and eventually a compromise was reached.
In April 1825 Sir Francis Burdett, managed to persuade the House of Commons to pass the Catholic Relief Bill. Both the prime minister, Lord Liverpool, and the home secretary, Robert Peel,
threatened to resign over this issue. Wellington worked hard behind the
scenes to stop this happening. Although he also disliked Burdett's
bill, he believed the time had come to settle the dispute and produced a
plan of his own for legalizing and endowing the Roman church in Ireland
by means of a concordat with the pope. The cabinet crisis ended in May
with the defeat of Burdett's bill in the House of Lords.
Lord Liverpool had a stroke on 17th February 1827 and he was forced to resign from office. George IV
interviewed Wellington, Robert Peel and George Canning for the post of
prime minister. Wellington advised the king that he would not be able to
serve under Canning. When the king appointed Canning, Wellington, Peel
and several other leading Tories resigned from the government. Canning was forced to rely on the support of the Whigs to hold on to power. Those Whigs who accepted government posts had to promise not to raise the issue of parliamentary reform.
George Canning died on 8th August 1827 and he was replaced by Lord Goderich.
Wellington now agreed to resume command of the army. Goderich's
government collapsed on 8th January 1828, and Wellington agreed to form
an administration. Although Wellington and the Home Secretary, Robert Peel, had always opposed Catholic Emancipation
they began to reconsider their views after they received information on
the possibility of an Irish rebellion. As Peel said to Wellington:
"though emancipation was a great danger, civil strife was a greater
danger". George IV
was violently opposed to Catholic Emancipation but after Wellington
threatened to resign, the king reluctantly agreed to a change in the
law.
In 1830 unemployment in rural areas began to grow and the invention
of the threshing machine posed another threat to the economic prosperity
of the farm labourer. The summer and autumn of 1830 saw a wave of
riots, rick-burnings and machine-breaking. In a debate in the House of Lords in November, Earl Grey, the Whig leader, suggested that the best way to reduce this violence was to introduce reform of the House of Commons.
The Duke of Wellington replied that the existing constitution was so
perfect that he could not imagine any possible alternative that would be
an improvement on the present system. As Harold Wilson
has pointed out: "Wellington was completely out of touch with the
people, ignorant of matters of industry and trade and the vast social
changes which had come about through the Industrial Revolution".
Wellington's close friend, Harriet Arbuthnot,
wrote in her diary: "The Duke is greatly affected by all this state of
affairs. He feels that beginning reform is beginning revolution, and
therefore he must endeavour to stem the tide as long as possible, and
that all he has to do is to see when and how it will be best for the
country that he should resign. He thinks he cannot till he is beat in
the House of Commons. He talked about this with me yesterday."
James Grant
argued: "One of the greatest defects in the character of the Duke as a
statesman is, his neither anticipating public opinion, nor keeping
abreast with it. He generally resists it until it has acquired an
overwhelming power... The Duke of Wellington is not a good speaker. His
style is rough and disjointed. His manner of speaking is much worse than
his diction. He has a bad screeching sort of voice, aggravated by an
awkward mode of mouthing the words. His enunciation is so bad, owing in
some measure to the loss of several of his teeth, that often, when at
the full stretch of his voice, you do not know what particular words he
is using."
In the speech on 8th November, 1830, Wellington made it clear that he had no intention of introducing parliamentary reform. Charles Greville
wrote in his journal: "The Duke of Wellington made a violent and
uncalled for declaration against Reform, which has without doubt sealed
his fate. Never was there an act of more egregious folly, or one so
universally condemned by friends and foes." When news of what Wellington
had said in Parliament was reported, his home in London was attacked by
a mob. Now extremely unpopular with the public, Wellington began to
consider resigning from office.
Wellington's biographer, Norman Gash
has argued: "The duke made his celebrated declaration, in the debate on
the king's speech at the beginning of November, that the constitution
needed no improvement and that he would resist any measure of
parliamentary reform as long as he was in office. Couched in his usual
peremptory and uncompromising style, his statement was probably intended
not so much to win back the ultra-tories (the usual interpretation
placed on it at the time) as to make his own attitude plain and so put a
stop to all the talk of parliamentary reform which had been going on,
both outside and inside the administration, for several weeks."
On 15th November, 1830 Wellington's government was defeated in a vote in the House of Commons. The new king, William IV, was more sympathetic to reform than his predecessor and two days later decided to ask Earl Grey
to form a government. As soon as Grey became prime minister he formed a
cabinet committee to produce a plan for parliamentary reform. Details
of the proposals were announced on 3rd February 1831. The bill was
passed by the Commons by a majority of 136, but despite a powerful
speech by Earl Grey, the bill was defeated in the House of Lords by forty-one.
Wellington attended the opening of the Liverpool to Manchester Railway but was deeply upset by the way he was booed and hissed by the crowds as his train entered Manchester. This was a reaction to his views on the Peterloo Massacre and his opposition to the 1832 Reform Act.
This experience made him hostile to the railways and he warned that
cheap travel may result in revolution. However, Wellington later changed
his mind about the railways after he developed a close relationship
with George Hudson. Hudson helped Wellington make a great deal of money by advising him when to buy and sell railway shares.
William IV dismissed the Whigs in November 1834 and with Robert Peel
absent in Italy, Wellington became temporary head of a new government
until his colleague's arrival three weeks later. He then became foreign
secretary. Peel immediately called a general election and during the
campaign issued what became known as the Tamworth Manifesto. In his election address to his constituents in Tamworth, Peel pledged his acceptance of the 1832 Reform Act
and argued for a policy of moderate reforms while preserving Britain's
important traditions. The Tamworth Manifesto marked the shift from the
old, repressive Toryism to a new, more enlightened Conservatism.
The general election gave Peel more supporters although there were still more Whigs than Tories
in the House of Commons. Despite this, the king invited Peel to form a
new administration. With the support of the Whigs, Peel's government was
able to pass the Dissenters' Marriage Bill and the English Tithe Bill. However, Peel was constantly being outvoted in the House of Commons and on 8th April 1835 he resigned from office.
In August 1841 Robert Peel
was once again invited to form a Conservative administration.
Wellington, who was now seventy-two years old, became a minister without
portfolio as well as leader of the House of Lords. Over the last few
years Britain had been spending more than it was earning. Peel decided
the government had to increase revenue. On 11th March, 1842, he
announced the introduction of income-tax at sevenpence in the pound. He
added, that he hoped that this was enable the government to reduce
duties on imported goods.
Peel's attempts to improve the situation in Ireland was severely
damaged by the 1845 potato blight. The Irish crop failed, therefore
depriving the people of their staple food. Peel was informed that three
million poor people in Ireland who had previously lived on potatoes
would require cheap imported corn. Peel realised that they only way to
avert starvation was to remove the duties on imported corn. Wellington
disagreed with Peel over the issue he urged his cabinet colleagues in a
memorandum of 30th November 1845 to support the prime minister since "a
good Government for the country is more important than Corn Laws or any
other consideration". The Corn Laws were repealed in 1846, but the policy split the Conservative Party and Peel was forced to resign.
The end of Peel's ministry, in June 1846, marked the effective end
of the Wellington's political career. He now developed a close
relationship with Angela Burdett-Coutts, one of the richest women in the world. At first he advised her on business matters. At the time she was in dispute with Edward Marjoribanks, who ran Coutts Bank.
Burdett-Coutts wanted to raise the salaries of the clerks in the bank.
Wellington helped her draft a letter to Marjoribanks that stated: "There
are points connected with the management of my House upon which I
cannot alter my opinions, founded as they are upon the invariable
practice of my grandfather.... I am anxious to know whether you will
consent to have prepared by next week our arrangement for a general rise
in public salaries of the clerks of the House; which contrary to the
practice of my grandfather has not taken place for some years."
On 19th August 1846, the Duke of Wellington wrote: "I hope you will
always write to me whenever you wish to communicate with a friend." When
they were apart he wrote to her daily, sometimes twice a day. It has
been estimated that during the relationship Wellington sent Miss
Burdett-Coutts, over 800 letters. They often sent each other the
"product of their walks", a flower, a delicate leaf, a fragrant herb. Edna Healey, the author of Lady Unknown: The Life of Angela Burdett-Coutts
(1978), has speculated: "Was he her lover? Undoubtedly their
relationship was very close. The tone of his letters, the winding
staircase to his private rooms, the intertwined locks of hair show how
close it was. But it is easier to believe that she secretly married him
than that she was his mistress. There is no proof of such a marriage,
only persistent rumours in both their families."
Granville Leveson-Gower
recorded in his diary: "The Duke of Wellington was astonishing the
world by a strange intimacy he has struck up with Miss Coutts with whom
he passes his life, and all sorts of reports have been rife of his
intention to marry her. Such are the lamentable appearances of decay in
his vigorous mind, which are the more to be regretted because he is in
most enviable circumstances, without ny political responsibility, vet
associated with public affairs, and surrounded with every sort of
respect and consideration on every side - at Court, in Parliament, in
society, and in the country."
On 7th February 1847, Angela Burdett-Coutts
proposed to the Duke of Wellington, despite the age difference, he was
seventy-eight and she was thirty-three. Wellington answered her in a
letter the following day: "My dearest Angela, I have passed every moment
of the evening and night since I quitted you in reflecting upon our
conversation of yesterday, every word of which I have considered
repeatedly. My first duty towards you is that of friend, guardian,
protector. You are young, my dearest! You have before you the prospect
of at least twenty years of enjoyment of happiness in life. I entreat
you again in this way, not to throw yourself away upon a man old enough
to be your grandfather, who, however strong, hearty and healthy at
present, must and will certainly in time feel the consequences and
infirmities of age... My last days would be embittered by the reflection
that your life was uncomfortable and hopeless."
Wellington retired from public life but on 10th April 1848 he organised a military force to protect London against possible Chartist violence at the large meeting at Kennington Common. That evening Wellington wrote to Angela Burdett-Coutts:
"The mobs have dispersed. There are but two or three hundred people
about Palace Yard... not a shot has been fired or an individual injured -
nor has a single soldier been seen."
Arthur Wellesley, the Duke of Wellington died at Walmer Castle on 14th September, 1852 and was buried at St Paul's Cathedral on 18th November. Norman Gash
claims that "the occasion for probably the most ornate and spectacular
funeral ever seen in England, the procession from Horse Guards via
Constitution Hill to St Paul's being witnessed, it was estimated, by a
million and a half people."
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