FACTOID # 42: English speaking kids are the world's biggest novel readers - but the least enthusiastic comic readers.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

FACTS & STATISTICS    Simple view

  1. Select countries to view: (hold down Control key and click to select several)

     

     

    Compare:

     

     

  1. Select fact or statistic: (* = graphable)

     

     

     

  2. (OPTIONAL) Compare to statistic: (both need to be graphable)

     

     

     

  3. View result as:

     

       
(OR) SEARCH ALL encyclopedia, stats & forums:   

Encyclopedia > Patronage Secretary to the Treasury
This article is about various offices in the government of the United Kingdom. For the American cabinet post, see United States Secretary of the Treasury.

In the United Kingdom, there are at least five Secretaries to the Treasury, officials officially acting as secretaries to the Treasury board. The origins of the office are unclear, although it probably originated during Lord Burghley's tenure as Lord Treasurer in the 16th century. The number of secretaries was expanded to two by 1714 at the latest.


One of the present-day secretaries, the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury, is the Government Chief Whip in the House of Commons, and another, the Permanent Secretary to the Treasury, is not a minister but a senior civil servant.


The remaining three secretaries, while of relatively modern origin, actually attend to Treasury business. The Chief Secretary to the Treasury is probably the most direct descendant of the earliest single Secretary - unlike the others, the Chief Secretary is of Cabinet rank - and is followed in order of precedence by the Financial Secretary to the Treasury and the Economic Secretary to the Treasury.


Phillip Oppenheim was briefly Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury from 1996 to 1997, although that office has not been seen before or since.


The other, more senior, Treasury ministers are the Chancellor of the Exchequer and the Paymaster General. From time to time, generally when a minister from a government department other than the Treasury is Paymaster General, there has been a Treasury Minister of State.


See also Lord High Treasurer.

Contents

Secretaries to the Treasury, 1760-1852

  • James West and Samuel Martin 1760-1762
  • Samuel Martin and Jeremiah Dyson 1762-1763
  • Jeremiah Dyson and Charles Jenkinson 1763-1764
  • Charles Jenkinson and Thomas Whateley 1764-1765
  • William Mellish and Charles Lowndes 1765-1766
  • Grey Cooper and thomas Bradshaw 1766-1770
  • Sir Grey Cooper and John Robinson 1770-1782
  • Henry Strachey and Edward Chamberlain 1782
  • Henry Strachey and Richard Burke 1782
  • Thomas Orde and George Rose 1782-1783
  • Richard Brinsley Sheridan and Richard Burke 1783
  • George Rose and Thomas Steele 1783-1791
  • George Rose and Charles Long 1791-1801
  • John Hiley Addington and Nicholas Vansittart 1801-1802
  • Nicholas Vansittart and John Sargent 1802-1804
  • William Huskisson and William Sturges Bourne 1804-1806
  • Nicholas Vansittart and John King 1806
  • Nicholas Vansittart and William Henry Fremantle 1806-1807
  • William Huskisson and Henry Wellesley 1807-1809
  • Richard Wharton and Charles Arbuthnot 1809-1814
  • Charles Arbuthnot and Stephen Rumbold Lushington 1814-1823
  • Stephen Rumbold Lushington and John Charles Herries 1823-1827
  • John Charles Herries and Joseph Planta 1827
  • Joseph Planta and Thomas Frankland Lewis 1827-1828
  • Joseph Planta and George Robert Dawson 1828-1830
  • Thomas Spring Rice and Edward Ellice 1830-1832
  • Thomas Spring Rice and Charles Wood 1832-1834
  • Charles Wood and Francis Thornhill Baring 1834
  • Sir George Clerk and Sir Thomas Fraser Fremantle 1834-1835
  • Francis Thornhill Baring and Edward J. Stanley 1835-1839
  • Edward J. Stanley and Robert Gordon 1839-1841
  • Richard More O'Ferral and Sir Denis Le Marchant 1841-1844
  • Sir George Clerk and John Young 1844-1845
  • John Young and Edward Cardwell 1845-1846
  • Henry Tufnell and John Parker 1846-1849
  • Henry Tufnell and William Goodenough Hayter 1849-1850
  • William Goodenough Hayter and George Cornewall Lewis 1850-1852

Financial Secretaries to the Treasury, 1852-present

Economic Secretaries to the Treasury, 1981-present

Parliamentary Secretaries to the Treasury, 1852-present

  • William Forbes Mackenzie 1852
  • William Goodenough Hayter 1853-1858
  • Sir William George Hilton Jolliffe 1858-1859
  • Henry Bouverie William Brand 1859-1866
  • Thomas Edward Taylor 1866-1868
  • George Grenfell Glynn 1868-1873
  • Arthur Wellesley Peel 1873-1874
  • William Hart Dyke 1874-1880
  • Lord Richard Grosvenor 1880-1885
  • Aretas Akers-Douglas 1885-1886
  • Arnold Morley 1886
  • Aretas Akers-Douglas 1886-1892(?)
  • incomplete
  • Joceline Bagot 1897-1898
  • incomplete
  • Charles McCurdy c1920 (jointly)
  • Sir George Younger c1920 (jointly?)
  • incomplete
  • Ben Spoor 1924
  • incomplete
  • Tom Kennedy 1929-31
  • David Margesson 1931-1940
  • incomplete?
  • Sir Charles Edwards 1940-42 (jointly)
  • James Gray Stuart 1941-45 (jointly)
  • William Whiteley 1942-51 (jointly until 1945)
  • Patrick Buchan-Hepburn 1951-55
  • Edward Heath 1955-1959
  • Martin Redmayne 1959-64
  • Ted Short 1964-66
  • John Silkin 1966-69
  • Bob Mellish 1969-70
  • Francis Pym 1970-1973
  • Humphrey Atkins 1973-1974
  • Bob Mellish 1974-1976
  • Michael Cocks 1976-1979
  • Michael Jopling 1979-1983
  • John Wakeham 1983-1986
  • David Waddington 1986-1989
  • Timothy Renton 1989-1990
  • Richard Ryder 1990-1995
  • Alastair Goodlad 1995-1997
  • Nick Brown 1997-1998
  • Ann Taylor 1998-2001
  • Hilary Armstrong 2001-

  Results from FactBites:
 
PATRON - LoveToKnow Article on PATRON (231 words)
The earliest use of the word in English appears to have been in the special ecclesiastical sense of the holder o~ an advowson, the right of presentation to a benefice.
From this meaning is deduced that of the person in whom lies the right of presenting to public offices, privileges, andc., still surviving in the title of the Patronage Secretary of the Treasury in Great Britain.
A full list of saints, with the objects of the peculiar patronage of each, is given in i\l.
  More results at FactBites »


 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments
Please enter the 5-letter protection code

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms.