Chief Secretary for Ireland

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The Chief Secretary's office in Dublin Castle.The Chief Secretary's residence was in the Chief Secretary's Lodge in the Phoenix Park, next door to the Viceregal Lodge.
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The Chief Secretary's office in Dublin Castle.
The Chief Secretary's residence was in the Chief Secretary's Lodge in the Phoenix Park, next door to the Viceregal Lodge.

The Chief Secretary was the a key office-holder of state in the British administration in Ireland. He was in theory the number two in the Lord Lieutenant's administration but from the early 19th century onwards the office frequently eclipsed the nominally superior office, with the Chief Secretary, not the Lord Lieutenant sitting in the British cabinet. The office was abolished in 1922. Its governmental role was incorporated into the Department of the President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State (now the Department of the Taoiseach).

[edit] The office before 1800

The dominant position of the Lord Lieutenant in the Irish governmental system had been central to the British administration throughout the period of the Kingdom of Ireland. The post of Chief Secretary however gradually increased in importance given his role as a manager of legislative business for the Government in the Irish House of Commons, in which he sat as an MP. While the Irish administration was not responsible to the parliament, it nevertheless needed to manage and influence parliament, both in insuring the passage of some key legislative measures and in the prevention of the enactment of others.

The Chief Secretaryship was of particular importance in the run-up to the eventual enactment, on the second attempt, of the Act of Union, 1800, when Viscount Castlereagh held the post. The Chief Secretary's exercise of patronage and bribery central to delivering the majority for the Union.

[edit] Chief Secretaries for Ireland, 1660-1922

[edit] See also

Dublin Castle administration in Ireland

Lord Lieutenant of Ireland | Lord Justices | Chief Secretary for Ireland | Under Secretary for Ireland | Lord Chancellor of Ireland | Irish Chancellor of the Exchequer | Attorney-General for Ireland | Solicitor-General for Ireland

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