Nisha Rathode (Editor)

William Dowdeswell (Chancellor)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Monarch
  
George III

Name
  
William Dowdeswell

Succeeded by
  
Charles Townshend

Political party
  
Whig

Party
  
Whigs

Nationality
  
British

Spouse
  
Bridget Codrington

Role
  
Politician



Prime Minister
  
The Marquess of Rockingham

Born
  
1721 (
1721
)

Alma mater
  
Christ Church, OxfordUniversity of Leiden

Died
  
February 6, 1775, Nice, France

Education
  
Westminster School, Christ Church, Oxford, Leiden University

Preceded by
  
Hon. George Grenville

William Dowdeswell PC (12 March 1721 – 6 February 1775) was a British politician. He went abroad to recover his health in 1774 but died the next February in Nice.

Contents

Background and education

A son of William Dowdeswell of Pull Court, Bushley, Worcestershire, he was educated at Westminster School, at Christ Church, Oxford, then at the University of Leiden. One of his fellow students was Baron d'Holbach. He spent the summer of 1746 with him at the uncle´s Messire François-Adam, Baron d’Holbach, Seigneur de Heeze, Leende et autres Lieux (ca. 1675–1753) estate Heeze-Leende.

Political career

Dowdeswell became member of Parliament for the family borough of Tewkesbury in 1747, retaining this seat until 1754, and from 1761 until his death he was one of the representatives of Worcestershire. Becoming prominent among the Whigs, Dowdeswell was made Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1765 under the Marquess of Rockingham, and his short tenure of this position appears to have been a successful one, he being in Lecky's words a good financier, but nothing more.

To general astonishment, he refused to abandon his friends and to take office under Chatham, who succeeded Rockingham in August 1766. Dowdeswell then led the Rockingham party in the House of Commons, taking an active part in debate until his death.

In 1774 during the Parliamentary debate of the Boston Port Act he warned the act will "soon inflame all America, and stir up a contention you will not be able to pacify and quiet".

Family

Dowdeswell married Bridget, daughter of Sir William Codrington, 1st Baronet, in 1747. He died at Nice in February 1775. The highly eulogistic epitaph on his monument at Bushley was written by Edmund Burke.

References

William Dowdeswell (Chancellor) Wikipedia