Discover

SECRETARY TO THE TREASURY

(Redirected from Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury)
:''This article is about various offices in the government of the United Kingdom. For the American cabinet post, see United States Secretary of the Treasury.''
In the United Kingdom, there are at five 'Secretaries to the Treasury', officials officially acting as secretaries to the Treasury board. The origins of the office are unclear, although it probably originated during Lord Burghley's tenure as Lord Treasurer in the 16th century. The number of secretaries was expanded to two by 1714 at the latest.
One of the present-day secretaries, the 'Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury', commonly known as the 'Patronage Secretary', is the Government Chief Whip in the House of Commons. This is because the Chief Whip is a political appointment rather than a government one, so the holder of the position is also required to hold a government post in order to sit in cabinet. The 'Permanent Secretary to the Treasury', is not a minister but is the senior Treasury civil servant. The remaining three secretaries and Paymaster-General actually attend to Treasury business.
The Chancellor is the most senior treasury secretary followed by Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Financial Secretary to the Treasury, Economic Secretary to the Treasury and Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury. However the Prime Minister remains First Lord of the Treasury, and this is the official title on the door to 10 Downing Street.

Contents
Current Secretaries to the Treasury (as of 28/06/07)
Secretaries to the Treasury, 1660–1830
Parliamentary Secretaries to the Treasury, 1830–present
Other Secretaries to the Treasury, 1852–present
See also
References

Current Secretaries to the Treasury (as of 28/06/07)



★ Chief Secretary to the Treasury - Andrew Burnham

★ Financial Secretary to the Treasury - Jane Kennedy

★ Economic Secretary to the Treasury - Kitty Ussher

★ Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury - Angela Eagle

★ Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury - Geoff Hoon

★ Permanent Secretary to the Treasury - Nicholas Macpherson

Secretaries to the Treasury, 1660–1830



Sir Philip Warwick 1660–1667

Sir George Downing, Bt 1667–1671

Sir Robert Howard 1671–1673

Charles Bertie 1673–1679

Henry Guy 1679–1689

William Jephson 1689–1691

Henry Guy 1691–1695

William Lowndes 1695–1711
YearSenior SecretaryJunior Secretary
1711William Lowndes Thomas Harley
1714John Taylor
1715Horatio Walpole
1717Charles Stanhope
1721Horatio Walpole
1724John Scrope
1730Edward Walpole
1739Stephen Fox
1741Henry Legge
1742Henry Furnese
1742John Jeffreys
1746James West
1752James West Nicholas Hardinge
1756Nicholas Hardinge Samuel Martin
1757James West
1758James West Samuel Martin
1762Samuel Martin Jeremiah Dyson
1763Jeremiah Dyson Charles Jenkinson
1764Charles Jenkinson Thomas Whateley
1765William Mellish Charles Lowndes
1766Sir Grey Cooper, Bt Thomas Bradshaw
1770John Robinson
1782Henry Strachey Edward Chamberlain
1782Richard Burke
1782Thomas Orde George Rose
1783Richard Brinsley Sheridan Richard Burke
1783George Rose Thomas Steele
1791Charles Long
1801John Hiley Addington Nicholas Vansittart
1802Nicholas Vansittart John Sargent
1804William Huskisson William Sturges Bourne
1806Nicholas Vansittart John King
1806William Henry Fremantle
1807William Huskisson Henry Wellesley
1809Richard Wharton Charles Arbuthnot
1814Charles Arbuthnot Stephen Rumbold Lushington
1823Stephen Rumbold Lushington John Charles Herries
1827John Charles Herries Joseph Planta
1827Joseph Planta Thomas Frankland Lewis
1828George Robert Dawson

Parliamentary Secretaries to the Treasury, 1830–present



Thomas Spring Rice 1830–1834

Charles Wood 1834

Sir George Clerk, Bt 1834–1835

Francis Thornhill Baring 1835–1839

Edward J. Stanley 1839–1841

Richard More O'Ferrall 1841–1844

Sir George Clerk, Bt 1844–1845

John Young 1845–1846

Henry Tufnell 1846–1850

William Goodenough Hayter 1850–1852

William Forbes Mackenzie 1852

William Goodenough Hayter 1853–1858

Sir William George Hylton Jolliffe 1858–1859

Henry Brand 1859–1866

Thomas Edward Taylor 1866–1868

Gerard Noel 1868

George Grenfell Glyn 1868–1873

Arthur Wellesley Peel 1873–1874

William Hart Dyke 1874–1880

Lord Richard Grosvenor 1880–1885

Aretas Akers-Douglas 1885–1886

Arnold Morley 1886

Aretas Akers-Douglas 1886–1892

Edward Marjoribanks 1892-1894

Thomas Edward Ellis 1894-1895

Sir William Hood Walrond, Bt 1895-1902

Sir Alexander Acland-Hood, Bt 1902-1905

George Whiteley 1905-1908

Joseph Pease 1908-1910

Master of Elibank 1910-1912

Percy Holden Illingworth 1912-1915

John William Gulland 1915

Lord Edmund Talbot 1915-16 (Conservative, jointly)

John William Gulland 1915-16 (Liberal, jointly)

Lord Edmund Talbot 1916-21 (Conservative, jointly)

Neil Primrose 1916-17 (Liberal, jointly)

Frederick Guest 1917-21 (Liberal, jointly)

Leslie Wilson 1921- 1922 (Conservative, jointly)

Charles McCurdy 1921-22 (Liberal, jointly)

Leslie Wilson 1922-1923

Bolton Eyres-Monsell 1923-1924

Ben Spoor 1924

Bolton Eyres-Monsell 1924-1929

Tom Kennedy 1929–31

David Margesson 1931–1940

Sir Charles Edwards 1940–42 (Labour, jointly)

James Gray Stuart 1941–45 (Conservative, jointly)

William Whiteley 1942–51 (Labour, jointly until 1945)

Patrick Buchan-Hepburn 1951–55

Edward Heath 1955–1959

Martin Redmayne 1959–64

Ted Short 1964–66

John Silkin 1966–69

Bob Mellish 1969–70

Francis Pym 1970–1973

Humphrey Atkins 1973–1974

Bob Mellish 1974–1976

Michael Cocks 1976–1979

Michael Jopling 1979–1983

John Wakeham 1983–1986

David Waddington 1986–1989

Timothy Renton 1989–1990

Richard Ryder 1990–1995

Alastair Goodlad 1995–1997

Nick Brown 1997–1998

Ann Taylor 1998–2001

Hilary Armstrong 2001–2006

Jacqui Smith 2006–2007

Geoff Hoon 2007–

Other Secretaries to the Treasury, 1852–present



★ See:


Chief Secretary to the Treasury


Financial Secretary to the Treasury


Economic Secretary to the Treasury


Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury.

See also



Lord High Treasurer

References



★ http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=16741

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves