'Sir George Grey, 2nd Baronet',
PC (
11 May 1799 –
9 September 1882) was a
British Whig politician. He held office under four Prime Ministers,
Lord Melbourne,
Lord John Russell,
Lord Aberdeen, and
Lord Palmerston, and notably served three times as
Home Secretary.
Grey was the only son of
Sir George Grey, 1st Baronet, of Fallodon, second son of
Charles Grey, 1st Earl Grey, and younger brother of Prime Minister
Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey. His mother was Mary Whitbread, daughter of Samuel Whitbread. Grey was educated privately and at
Oriel College, Oxford. Originally intending to become a priest, he instead chose law as his profession, and was called to the bar in
1826. He began a successful legal practice, but soon turned to politics.
Grey was elected to parliament for
Devonport in 1832, and quickly made his mark in the
House of Commons. He did not hold office in the
Whig administration of his uncle
Lord Grey, but when
Lord Melbourne became Prime Minister in 1834, he was appointed
Under-Secretary of State for War and the Colonies. The government fell in December of that year, but returned to power in May
1835, when Grey resumed the post of
Under-Secretary of State for War and the Colonies (succeeding
William Ewart Gladstone). He retained this office until 1839, when he was made
Judge Advocate General. The same year Grey was also admitted to the
Privy Council. He was then briefly
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster in 1841, with a seat in the cabinet for the first time. However, the
Whigs were defeated in the
general election of that year.
The Whigs returned to power in 1846 under
Lord John Russell, who appointed Grey
Home Secretary, the first of his three spells in this position. His first tenure at the
Home Office notably saw him deal with relief efforts to the victims of the
Irish Potato Famine and trying to subdue the
Irish rebellion of 1848. The latter year also saw the peak of the
Chartist movement, which staged a massive rally in
London in April. In 1847 Grey had left his old
Devonport seat and was instead elected for
Northumberland North. He remained Home Secretary until the
1852 general election, when, despite enjoying widespread popularity, he lost his seat. Grey remained out of parliament until January 1853, when he was returned for
Morpeth. He at first refused to join the coalition government of
Lord Aberdeen, but in June 1854 he accepted the post of
Colonial Secretary. The coalition fell in February 1855, and the Whigs returned to office under
Lord Palmerston. Grey was appointed to his old office of
Home Secretary, which he retained until the government resigned in February 1858. The
Conservative administration under the
Earl of Derby which took office only lasted until June the following year, when Palmerston again became Prime Minister. Grey was now appointed
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, but in 1861 he became Home Secretary for the third time. The government fell in 1866, and Grey was not to hold office again. Before the
1874 general election, he was overlooked as the
Liberal candidate for Morpeth in favour of miners’ leader
Thomas Burt. This marked the end of Grey’s public life and he spent the remainder of his life in retirement at his Fallodon estate in Northumberland.
Grey married Anna Sophia Ryder, eldest daughter of Henry Ryder,
Bishop of Lichfield. They had one son, George Henry Grey (
1835 -
1874).
Grey died in September 1882, aged 83. His only son had predeceased him, and he was therefore succeeded in the Baronetcy by his grandson,
Edward. He was also to become a prominent Liberal politician, and served as Foreign Secretary from 1905 to 1916, when he was raised to the peerage as
Viscount Grey of Fallodon.
See also
★
Earl Grey
★
Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon