THE TREASURY. The Lord Treasurer, whose office is now executed by Lords Commissioners, hath the appointment of all officers employed in collecting the revenues of the Crown; he hath the nomination of all escheaters, and the disposai of all places and ways relating to the revenue; and power to let leases of the Crown Lands. 1754, April 6, 1762, May 29, 1763, April 16, 1765, July 12, 1766, Aug. 2, 1770, Jan. 28, 1782, Mar. 30, July 30, 1783, April 5, Dec. 27, 1801, July 2, 1804, May 15, 1806, Feb. 11, 1807, Mar. 31, 1810, June 23, 1812, June 9, 1827, April 24, Sept. 5, 1828, Jan. 52, 1830, Nov. 22, 1834, July 18, Nov. 21, Dec. 10, 1835, April 14, 1841, Sept. 3, 1846, July 1, 1852, Feb. 27, Dec. 28, 1855, Feb. 8, First Lords. Duke of Newcastle. Marquess of Rockingham. Right Hon. Spencer Perceval. Viscount Melbourne. 1858, Feb. 26, 1859, June 18, Viscount Palmerston. 1866, July 6, 1868, Mar. 3, Dec. 9, 1874, Mar. 2, 1880, April Earl of Derby. Right Hon. Benjamin Disraeli, Right Hon. Benjamin Disraeli, (Earl of Beaconsfield.) K Chancellors of the Exchequer. Right Hon. William Pitt. Right Hon. Spencer Perceval. Sir Robert Peel, bart. Right Hon. William- Ewart Gladstone. Lords of the Treasury. Right Hon. William-Ewart Gladstone. Mr. John Holms. Mr. C.-C. Cotes. Joint Secretaries. 1880, May Lord F. Cavendish. Lord R. Grosvenor. Sir R.-R.-W. Lingen, K.C.B. (Permanent.) was THE SECRETARIES OF STATE. { Until the reign of Henry VIII. there was only one Secretary of State; and until the reign of Elizabeth, the Secretaries were never of the Privy Council. From the death of Queen Anne to the Rebellion of 1745, there a third Secretary for Scotland; and from 1768, to the loss of America, in 1782, there was one for the Colonies, which office was revived in 1804, in conjunction with the War Department. The departments of the two Secretaries were, previous to 1782, divided into Northern and Southern, now styled the Home and Foreign Departments. From 1782 until 1854 there were two, and sometimes three, Secretaries of State. In that year a fourth was added, in consequence of the separation of the Department of War from that of the Colonies, and in 1858 the creation of a Secretary of State for India increased the number to five, at which it now remains. With the Home Secretary, all grants, pardons, and regulations in civil matters of every kind, are made out and executed. To the Foreign Secretary belong all despatches to and from other courts, and all business appertaining to the same. They have the custody of the privy signet, because the Queen's private letters are sealed with it. There are four Clerks of the Signet, who make out grants, patents, &c. which have the sign manual, to which the Signet being added, it is a warrant to the Privy Seal, as the Privy Seal is a warrant to the Great Seal. The Paper Office belongs to the Secretaries of State, where all papers, letters, memorials, negotiations, &c., are deposited and preserved.] Home Department; previous to 1782 styled the Northern Department. Duke of Portland. Lord Pelham. Right Hon. Charles Yorke. Lord Hawkesbury. Right Hon. Richard Ryder. Right Hon. Robert Peel. Right Hon. William-Sturges Bourne. Right Hon. Henry Goulburn. Sir James-Robert-George Graham, bart. Right Hon. Spencer-Horatio Walpole. Foreign Department; previous to 1782 styled the Southern Department. Lord Hawkesbury. Lord Harrowby. Earl of Mulgrave. Right Hon. Charles-James Fox. Right Hon. George Canning. Earl of Clarendon. Earl Granville. 1841, Sept. 3, 1845, Dec. 23, 1846, July 6, 1852, Feb. 27, Dec. 28, Viscount Castlereagh. Right Hon. Edward G. Stanley. Right Hon. Charles Grant. Lord Stanley. Right Hon. William-Ewart Gladstone. Right Hon. Sir John-S. Pakington, bart. [1854, June 10.—The Departments were divided.] |