William Lowndes (British politician)

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William Lowndes (1 November 165220 January 1724) was Secretary to the Treasury of Great Britain under King William III and Queen Anne, and a Member of Parliament under William, Anne and George I.

Lowndes was born in Winslow, Buckinghamshire, the son of Robert Lowndes (1619–1683) and his second wife, Elizabeth FitzWilliam. Robert was descended from the Lowndes of Overton in Cheshire, but his grandfather, also Robert, had moved south to Buckinghamshire. Other relatives had settled in South Carolina. Robert spent some years in Virginia, where he had family, but returned to England before his death. The Lowndes were all descended from William, Seigneur de Lounde, who came to England with William the Conqueror in 1066.

William was educated at the free school in Buckingham, at Eton College, and at the University of Oxford. He joined HM Treasury as a clerk. He was elected as a Member of Parliament for Seaford in Sussex, a "limb" of the Cinque Ports, in 1695. Lowndes remained a Member of Parliament for many years, and served as chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means, becoming known throughout Britain as "Ways and Means Lowndes".

Lowndes also became Secretary to the Treasury in 1695. His Report containing an essay for the amendment of the silver coins, written during the crisis of 1695, was answered by John Locke, whose views on the reform of the currency prevailed. He became wealthy as a result of holding office in the Treasury. In 1700, he built Winslow Hall in Winslow, Buckinghamshire.

He originated the funded system and rose to great power and influence in Parliament. In recognition of his service, Queen Anne conferred upon him the office of Auditor of the Land Revenue for life, in reversion to his sons, with an augmentation to his coat of arms.

He was elected as MP for St Mawes in Cornwall in the first Parliament of King George I, but stood unsuccessfully for Westminster in 1722. Shortly afterwards, he was elected for East Looe, also in Cornwall, after that constituency was vacated by Horace Walpole when he decided to stand for Great Yarmouth instead. Lowndes bought the freehold reversion of leasehold property he owned in St. James's and Knightsbridge in 1723, in areas now known as Lowndes Square and Lowndes Street.

His death was announced in the House of Commons by Walpole, saying "the House had lost a very useful Member, and the public as able and honest a servant as ever the Crown had".

Lowndes married four times:

  1. Elizabeth Harsnett, daughter of Sir Roger Harsnett (she died in 1680)
  2. Jane Hopper in 1683 (she died in 1685)
  3. Elizabeth Martyn, daughter of Richard Martyn (she died 1689)
  4. Rebecca Shales, daughter of John Shales. Rebecca was a descendant of Henry Pole, 1st Baron Montagu, the eldest son of the Margaret Pole, 8th Countess of Salisbury; she was the daughter of George, Duke of Clarence, and so niece of King Edward IV.

Lowndes had children with each of his wives, 25 children in all. His offspring were also fruitful: one son had 16 children, including four sets of twins in four years; a grandson had 10 children. Charles Lowndes, a son by his fourth wife, became Secretary to the Treasury in the 1760s.

The expression "Take care of the pence, and the pounds will take care of themselves" is attributed to him.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Quoted in a letter by Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield, dated 6 November 1747; see John Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th edition, 1919.
  • Stephen B Baxter, The Development of the Treasury, 1660-1702 (1957)

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