John Eldon Gorst
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Sir John Eldon Gorst (1835 – 1916) was an English lawyer and politician.
He served as Solicitor General for England and Wales from 1885 to 1886 and as Vice-President of the Committee of the Council on Education between 1895 and 1902.
He was born at Preston, the son of Edward Chaddock Gorst, who took the name of Lowndes on succeeding to the family estate in 1853. He graduated third wrangler from St John's College, Cambridge, in 1857, and was admitted to a fellowship. After beginning to read for the bar in London, his father's illness and death led to his sailing to New Zealand, where he married in 1860 Mary Elizabeth Moore. The Māori had at that time set up a king of their own in the Waikato district and Gorst, who had made friends with the chief Tamihana (William Thomson), acted as an intermediary between the Māori and the government. Sir George Grey made him inspector of schools, then resident magistrate, and eventually civil commissioner in Upper Waikato. Tamihana's influence secured his safety in the Māori outbreak of 1863. In 1908 he published a volume of recollections, under the title of New Zealand Revisited: Recollections of the Days of my Youth.
He then returned to England and was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1865, becoming QC in 1875. He stood unsuccessfully for Hastings in the Conservative interest at the 1865 general election, and next year entered parliament as member for the borough of Cambridge, but failed to secure re-election at the dissolution of 1868. After the Conservative defeat of that year he was entrusted by Disraeli with the reorganization of the party machinery, and in five years of hard work he paved the way for the Conservative success at the general election of 1874.
At a by-election in 1875 he reentered parliament as member for Chatham, which he continued to represent until 1892. He joined Sir Henry Drummond-Wolff, Lord Randolph Churchill and Mr Arthur Balfour in the Fourth Party, and he became solicitor-general in the administration of 1885-1886 and was knighted. On the formation of the second Salisbury administration (1886) he became Under-Secretary of State for India and in 1891 Financial Secretary to the Treasury. At the general election of 1892 he became member for Cambridge University.
He was deputy chairman of committees in the House of Commons from 1888 to 1891, and on the formation of the third Salisbury administration in 1895 he became vice-president of the committee of the council on education (until 1902). Sir John Gorst adhered to the principles of Tory democracy which he had advocated in the days of the fourth party, and continued to exhibit an active interest in the housing of the poor, the education and care of their children, and in social questions generally, both in parliament and in the press. But he was always exceedingly independent in his political action. He objected to Joseph Chamberlain's proposals for tariff reform, and lost his seat at Cambridge at the general election of 1906, standing as a Free Trader, to a tariff reformer. He then withdrew from the vice-chancellorship of the Primrose League, of which he had been one of the founders, on the ground that it no longer represented the policy of Lord Beaconsfield. In 1910 he contested Preston as a Liberal, but failed to secure election.
His elder son, Sir Eldon Gorst, was financial adviser to the Egyptian government from 1898 to 1904, when he became assistant under-secretary of state for foreign affairs. In 1907 he succeeded Lord Cromer as British agent and Consul-General in Egypt.
An account of Sir John Gorst's connection with Lord Randolph Churchill will be found in the Fourth Party (1906), by his younger son, Harold E Gorst.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
[edit] Offices held
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by George Elliott |
Member of Parliament for Chatham 1875–1892 |
Succeeded by Lewis Vivian Loyd |
Preceded by Sir George Gabriel Stokes Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb |
Member of Parliament for Cambridge University 2-member constituency (with Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb) 1892–1906 |
Succeeded by John Frederick Peel Rawlinson Samuel Henry Butcher |
Legal offices | ||
Preceded by Farrer Herschell |
Solicitor General for England and Wales 1885–1886 |
Succeeded by Horace Davey |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by Stafford Howard |
Under-Secretary of State for India 1886–1891 |
Succeeded by George Curzon |
Preceded by William Jackson |
Financial Secretary to the Treasury 1891–1892 |
Succeeded by Sir J.T. Hibbert |
Preceded by The Earl of Cromer |
British Consul-General in Egypt 1907–1911 |
Succeeded by The Viscount Kitchener |
Academic offices | ||
Preceded by Arthur Balfour |
Rector of the University of Glasgow 1893—1896 |
Succeeded by Joseph Chamberlain |
[edit] External links
- The Children of the Nation: How Their Health and Vigour Should be Promoted by the State By John Eldon Gorst
- New Zealand Revisited: Recollections of the Days of My Youth By John Eldon Gorst