Ministry of the Chits

The Ministry of the Chits[1] was the government of the Kingdom of England from November 1679 to 1688. The administration was led by three young ministers, collectively known as the chits:[2] Laurence Hyde (Earl of Rochester, 1682), Sidney Godolphin (Lord Godolphin, 1684) and the Earl of Sunderland.

Rochester, brother-in-law of King Charles II's brother James, Duke of York, served as First Lord of the Treasury until "kicked upstairs" (term coined by Lord Halifax[3]) as Lord President of the Council in September 1684. On the Duke of York's succession as King James II in February 1685, Rochester returned as Lord High Treasurer. He was troubled by the King's Catholicism and disputed religious matters with him. On 4 January 1687 James II dismissed Rochester and his brother the Earl of Clarendon, replacing both with Catholic appointees, Lord Belasyse (aged 72) and Lord Arundell (aged 79).

Sunderland, who served variously as Northern Secretary and Southern Secretary, and additionally as Lord President of the Council from 1685, remained in post until his dismissal by James II in October 1688, when he fled to Rotterdam.

Godolphin, First Lord of the Treasury 1684–85, was retained at the Treasury by William III, returning as First Lord in the Carmarthen Ministry of 1690.

The Chits

The moniker "the chits" stems from a satirical verse on the three ministers, attributed to John Dryden by Johnson's Dictionary:[4]

But Sunderland, Godolphin, Lory,
These will appear such chits in story,
'Twill turn all politics to jests,
To be repeated like John Dory,
While fiddlers sing at feasts.<ref>Russell, Lord John (1820). "The Life of William Lord Russell, Vol. 1, p.182". Google Books. Retrieved 6 May 2016.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)</ref>

The Ministry

November 1679 to September 1684

OFFICENAMETERM
First Lord of the TreasuryThe Earl of Rochester16791684
Treasury Commissioner
Northern Secretary
Sidney Godolphin16791684
1684
Northern Secretary
Southern Secretary
Northern Secretary
The Earl of Sunderland16791680
16801681
16831684
Lord Chancellor
Lord Keeper
The 1st Earl of Nottingham16791682
The Lord Guilford16821684
Lord President of the CouncilThe Earl of Radnor16791684
Lord Privy SealThe Earl of Anglesey16791682
The Marquess of Halifax16821684
Lord StewardThe Duke of Ormonde16791684
Lord ChamberlainThe Earl of Arlington16791681
The Earl of Mulgrave16811684
Southern SecretaryHenry Coventry16791680
The Earl of Sunderland16801681
Sir Leoline Jenkins16811684
Northern SecretaryThe Earl of Sunderland16791680
Sir Leoline Jenkins16801681
The Earl of Conway16811683
The Earl of Sunderland16831684
Sidney Godolphin1684
Chancellor of the ExchequerSir John Ernle16791684
First Lord of the AdmiraltySir Henry Capell16791681
The 2nd Earl of Nottingham16811684
  • Lord Nottingham was Lord Chancellor until 1682, when Lord Guilford assumed the same position; however, the latter had not yet acceded to the peerage, and was therefore forced to assume the position of Lord Keeper. For all intents and purposes, these positions are identical, and have been formatted as such.
  • Additionally, there were two Earls of Nottingham: the elder Nottingham served as Lord Chancellor, and his successor to the earldom served as First Lord of the Admiralty.

September 1684 to February 1685

OFFICENAMETERM
First Lord of the TreasuryThe Lord Godolphin16841685
Southern SecretaryThe Earl of Sunderland16841685
Lord President of the CouncilThe Earl of Rochester16841685
Lord KeeperThe Lord Guilford16841685
Lord Privy SealThe Marquess of Halifax16841685
Lord StewardThe Duke of Ormonde16841685
Lord ChamberlainThe Earl of Mulgrave16841685
Northern SecretaryThe Earl of Middleton16841685
Chancellor of the ExchequerSir John Ernle16841685

February 1685 to October 1688

OFFICENAMETERMHow left office
Lord High Treasurer
First Lord of the Treasury
The Earl of Rochester16851687
The Lord Belasyse16871689
Chamberlain to the Queen
Treasury Commissioner
The Lord Godolphin16851687
16871689
"He adhered to James till the last; he was one of the council of five [the others were Belasyse, Preston, Jeffreys and Arundell] appointed to remain in London when James advanced to Salisbury [on 17 November], and he was sent with Halifax and Nottingham to treat with the Prince of Orange at Hungerford in December."[5]
Lord President of the Council and Southern Secretary
Lord President of the Council and Northern Secretary
The Earl of Sunderland16851688Dismissed 27 October 1688[6]
The Viscount PrestonOctober 1688
Lord ChancellorThe Lord Jeffreys16851688Surrendered the great seal to the king, 8 December 1688[7]
Lord Privy SealThe Earl of Clarendon16851687
The Lord Arundell of Wardour16871688"On the abdication of James, Arundell retired to his house at Breamore, Hampshire, and took no further part in public life."[8]
Lord StewardThe Duke of Ormonde16851688Died 21 July 1688
Lord ChamberlainThe Earl of Mulgrave16851689"Upon William's landing in England Mulgrave remained with James in London until the time of his flight. When the news of his capture in Kent [on 11 December] reached London, Halifax wished to adjourn the council of lords, who carried on a provisional government, in order to avoid the responsibility of action. But Mulgrave, begging them to keep their seats, introduced the king's messenger, and prevailed on them to send Lord Feversham to the assistance of James (Mulgrave, Account of the Revolution). He came to the aid also of the Spanish ambassador when the mob demolished his house, inviting him to Whitehall and paying him marked honour. For this conduct, which avoided friction with the Spanish court, he received the thanks of both James and William. On the establishment of the revolutionary government Mulgrave quietly submitted and voted for associating William with Mary on the throne."[9]
Northern SecretaryThe Earl of Middleton1685October 1688Transferred to Southern Department Oct. 1688[10]
Southern SecretaryThe Earl of MiddletonOctober 1688"[H]e justified the confidence reposed in him by remaining faithful to James to the last. After the king's sudden withdrawal to Faversham [on the night of 10/11 December] he declined to attend the meeting of the lords and privy council called to consider the steps to be taken in the crisis (Clarke, Life of James II, ii. 259). Nevertheless he was one of the four nobles deputed by them to invite the king to return to Whitehall, and was present with him at Whitehall when a message came from the Prince of Orange that James should retire from London. At the king's request he arranged for his withdrawal to Rochester [on 18 December]. Subsequently he waited on the king there to surrender the seals of the secretary's office, and endeavoured to induce him to abandon his projected flight and to summon a parliament. It was to him that the king, after making his secret escape, left the paper containing his reasons for ‘withdrawing himself from England.’ "[11]
Chancellor of the ExchequerSir John Ernle16851688
gollark: I do not think globally restricting what people are allowed to *believe* is a good idea.
gollark: Er, that sounds bad.
gollark: Oh, so "isolationist" as in "no military interference", not "no interaction with other countries", that's good.
gollark: Global trade is pretty important and beneficial.
gollark: Um. No?

References

  1. Treasure, Geoffrey; Dawson, Ian. "Who's Who in British History, Vol.1, A-H: Hyde, Laurence, Earl of Rochester". Google Books. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  2. Ward, Adolphus William (1891). "Hyde, Laurence" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 28. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  3. Macaulay, Thomas Babington (1889). The History of England from the Accession of James the Second. 1. London: Longmans. p. 136.
  4. Johnson, Samuel (1773). "A Dictionnary of the English Language (4th ed.)". Google Books. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  5. Dictionary of National Biography article
  6. Dictionary of National Biography article
  7. Dictionary of National Biography article
  8. Dictionary of National Biography article
  9. Dictionary of National Biography article
  10. 'Lists of appointments', in Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 2, Officials of the Secretaries of State 1660-1782, ed. J C Sainty (London, 1973), pp. 22-58. British History Online accessed 13 January 2018.
  11. Dictionary of National Biography article
Preceded by
Privy Council ministry
Government of England
16791688
Succeeded by
Carmarthen–Halifax ministry
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.