'Sir George Otto Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet'
OM,
PC (
20 July 1838 –
17 August 1928) was a
British statesman and
author and the only son of
Sir Charles Trevelyan.
Early career
He was born at
Rothley Temple,
Leicestershire, the son of
Charles Edward Trevelyan, the civil servant. His mother Hannah More MacAulay was the daughter of
Zachary Macaulay and the sister of
Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay. He was educated at
Harrow and at
Trinity College, Cambridge where he was President of the
Cambridge Union Society. In 1861 he wrote his ''Horace'' at the
University of Athens, a topical drama in verse, parts of which are said to have offended
Whewell and lost Trevelyan a fellowship. The following year he went out as a civil servant to India, where he spent several years. During his stay he contributed "Letters of a Competition Wallah" to Macmillan's Magazine (republished 1864). ''Cawnpore'', an account of that terrible tragedy, was published in
1865. During the same year he was elected as a
Liberal MP for
Tynemouth. In
1867 he wrote ''The Ladies in Parliament'', a humorous political brochure in verse. At the general election of 1868 he was returned for the
Hawick burghs, which he continued to represent until 1886.
Office
When the first
Gladstone ministry was formed, in December 1868, Trevelyan was appointed
Civil Lord of the Admiralty, but resigned in July 1870 on a point of conscience connected with the government Education Bill. He advocated a sweeping reform of the army, including the abolition of the purchase of commissions, and both in and out of parliament he was the foremost supporter for many years of the extension of the county franchise. In the session of 1874 he brought forward his Household Franchise (Counties) Bill, which was lost on the second reading; it was not till ten years later that the agricultural laborer was enfranchized. Among other causes which he warmly supported were women's suffrage, a thorough reform of metropolitan local government, and the drastic reform or abolition of the
House of Lords. He was also in favour of the direct veto and other temperance legislation. In 1876 he published ''The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay'', and in 1880 he published ''The Early History of Charles James Fox''. In the latter year he was appointed
Parliamentary Secretary to the Admiralty. This office he held until May 1882, when, after the assassination of
Lord Frederick Cavendish, he became for two years
Chief Secretary for Ireland and was appointed to the
Privy Council. From November 1884 to June 1885 he was
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. In February 1886 he became
Secretary for Scotland, but resigned in March over Home Rule. The same year he succeeded his father in the
baronetcy. At the general election of
1886 Sir George Trevelyan lost his seat for
Hawick. As a representative of the
Unionist party he took part in the Round Table Conference, and, being satisfied with the modifications made by Gladstone in his Home Rule scheme, he formally rejoined the Liberal party. In August 1887 he re-entered the House of Commons as member for
Glasgow Bridgeton; and from 1892 to 1895 he was again Secretary for Scotland. Early in 1897 he resigned his seat in parliament and retired into private life.
Retirement
In 1899 he published the first volume of a ''History of the American Revolution'', which was completed (3 vols.) in 1905; in the latter year, as Interludes in Prose and Verse, he republished his early classical jeux d'esprit and Indian pieces. He had married in 1869 Caroline Philips, whose father
Mark Philips was MP for
Bury. His eldest son,
Charles Philips Trevelyan (b. 1870), became Liberal M.P. for the Elland division of
Yorkshire in 1899, and in 1908 was appointed
Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Education. The second son was
R. C. Trevelyan, the artist. The third son,
George Macaulay Trevelyan (b. 1876), became well known as a brilliant historical writer, notably with two books on Garibaldi (1907 and 1909) and his ''Life of John Bright'' (1911).
Honours
★ In
1911 He was appointed as a Member of the
Order of Merit.
References
★
★
★ Torrance, David, ''The Scottish Secretaries'' (Birlinn 2006)
External links
★