
2nd Viscount Melville
'Robert Dundas, 2nd Viscount Melville' (
March 14,
1771–
June 10,
1851) was a
British statesman, the son of
Henry Dundas, the 1st
Viscount. Dundas was the
Member of Parliament for
Hastings in
1794,
Rye in
1796 and
Midlothian in
1801. He was also
Keeper of the Signet for Scotland from
1800. He was appointed a
Privy Counsellor in 1807 and a
Knight of the Thistle in
1821, and was
Chancellor of the University of St Andrews from
1814. Melville filled various political offices and was
First Sea Lord from
1812 to
1827, and from
1828 to
1830; his eldest son inherited his title.
Early Life and Family
He was born in
Edinburgh on 14 March 1771, the only son of Henry Dundas, first Viscount Melville (1742–1811), and Elizabeth (1751–1843). Educated at the
Royal High School, Edinburgh, he went in 1786 on a continental tour and enrolled at
Göttingen University. He studied afterwards at
Edinburgh University and at
Emmanuel College,
Cambridge, and matriculated at
Lincoln's Inn in 1788. After a successful attempt at law he became his fathers private secretary from 1794, though he was brought in as MP for Hastings in 1794, then Rye in 1796. The same year, on 29 August, he married an heiress, Anne Saunders (died 10 Sept 1841), and took her name beside his own. They had four sons and two daughters; their eldest son, Henry Dundas, later third Viscount Melville, became an army officer while their second son,
Richard Saunders Dundas, who also became
First Lord of the Admiralty.
President of the Board of Trade
Dundas was appointed
Keeper of the Signet for Scotland and elected MP for
Midlothian (Edinburghshire) in 1801. He remained silent in parliament until his speeches of 1805 and 1806 in defence of his father, who was then being impeached. His first real test came in negotiating to be left in charge of Scotland by a hostile ‘ministry of all the talents’. He got nowhere, but won the respect of his own side, and the problem vanished with the ministry's collapse. He was rewarded with the presidency of the Board of Control for
India by the
Duke of Portland in 1807.
Dundas's main task was to frustrate any possibility that
Napoleon might exploit his alliance with
Russia to make some attempt on British India. He sent a mission to the shah of
Persia, at whose court French agents were present. He formed alliances with the princes of
Lahore and
Kabul. He ordered occupation of the Portuguese factories in India and
China, of the Dutch colony of Java, and of the French stations on
Mauritius and
Réunion. He had also to deal with a sharp deterioration, through loss of trade during the war, in the finances of the
East India Company. A series of reports on its development since the India Act of 1784, written by a select committee which he chaired, concluded that it should give up its inefficient trading privileges, at least in the subcontinent. Dundas drafted the legislation which ended them at the renewal of the company's charter in 1813.
Dundas's Indian administration was interrupted for six months in 1809 when he served as chief secretary for
Ireland.
Spencer Perceval, succeeding Portland, then wanted to promote him to the cabinet as secretary for war, but this did not happen due to the wishes of his father. Dundas returned to the Board of Control, still without a place in cabinet. He succeeded as
Viscount Melville on 27 May 1811. The next year, under Prime Minister
Lord Liverpool, he was promoted
First Lord of the Admiralty.
Admiralty
While the Napoleonic wars went on, his job was to maintain the British maritime supremacy established at the
battle of Trafalgar. In a state paper of February 1813 he pointed out that
France, with the shipbuilding resources of
Holland and
Italy at her disposal, would be able to construct a fleet to match Britain's if the struggle continued much longer. The point was underlined by complaints from the
Duke of Wellington in
Spain of inadequate protection for the convoys supplying him, especially after the outbreak of hostilities with the
United States in 1812 unleashed hordes of American privateers on the Atlantic.
Drastic cuts followed the eventual peace, but Britain, now the only colonial power of any importance, found her maritime commitments increased. Melville did not think the fleet could be reduced much below 100 ships of the line. The cabinet set a limit of forty-four. The following years saw a constant struggle by Melville to find every possible economy while he avoided meeting a target he regarded as unreal. He quietly got his way, not least by improving the design and durability of ships, research on which benefited from his close personal interest. Yet he resisted the introduction of steamers, since an infant technology seemed bound to prove expensive and unreliable; moreover, if navies were to be rebuilt all round as steam driven, Britain would place herself on the same level as her rivals. By the late 1820s he was able to authorise the construction of new and larger classes of ship, matching those in France and the United States. Even out of tight budgets he never failed to squeeze something for another scientific interest, in exploration (where places are named after him, see below).
Scotland
Appointed a governor of the
Bank of Scotland. he was elected chancellor of the University of St Andrews in 1814, and made a knight of the
Thistle in 1821. The crisis of the system came in 1827 on the resignation of Liverpool and the succession of
George Canning, who was set on
Catholic emancipation. Melville said that, while he personally supported it, he could not approve of a policy which would split the outgoing cabinet. The
whigs in Canning's coalition now persuaded him that a Scottish manager was unnecessary; the home secretary could do all the work with a native adviser or two.
First Sea Lord
The old governing interest in
Scotland began to break up, a process which did not halt when Melville returned under Wellington and
Sir Robert Peel as
President of the Board of Control in 1828, then again at the Admiralty as
First Sea Lord. The Reform Act would anyway end the arrangements under which the Dundases had ruled Scotland. Melville resigned in 1830, never to hold office again. But he made himself useful in good works, notably chairmanship of the royal commission which in 1845 proposed reform of the Scots poor law.
He died on 10 June 1851 at
Melville Castle, and was buried at the Old Kirk,
Lasswade, Edinburghshire, on 17 June.
Place names
His name is perpetuated by that of
Melville Sound and
Melville Island, Canada because of his interest in
Arctic exploration.
Melville Island in the Northern Territory of
Australia was also named for him, by explorer
Philip Parker King.