Lord George Bentinck

Lord William George Frederick Cavendish-Scott-Bentinck (27 February 1802  21 September 1848), better known as Lord George Bentinck, was an English Conservative politician and racehorse owner noted for his role (with Benjamin Disraeli) in unseating Sir Robert Peel over the Corn Laws.

Lord George Bentinck
Member of Parliament for King's Lynn
In office
1828–1848
Preceded byWilliam Henry Cavendish-Bentinck
John Walpole
Succeeded byEdward Stanley
Viscount Jocelyn
Personal details
Born(1802-02-27)27 February 1802
Welbeck Abbey, Nottinghamshire
Died21 September 1848(1848-09-21) (aged 46)
The Dukeries, Nottinghamshire
NationalityBritish
Political partyConservative
Parent(s)William Bentinck, 4th Duke of Portland
Henrietta Scott

Family

Bentinck was born into the prominent Bentinck family, the fifth child and third son of William Bentinck, 4th Duke of Portland and Henrietta (née Scott).[1] His mother was the daughter, and along with her two sisters, the heiress, of the rich General John Scott of Fife.

Bentinck was known by the name George, as all the men in his family were given the first name William. He was educated privately and grew up on his father's Welbeck Abbey estate in Nottinghamshire and at Fullarton House, near Troon, Ayrshire, where his father developed the docks.[2]

Early career

Statue in Cavendish Square, London

In 1818, Bentinck and his older brother John joined the army, but personal conflicts derailed his military career. As an officer in the 9th Lancers, he called his superior officer, Captain John Ker, a "poltroon", in February 1821. Ker levelled charges against Bentinck of "inattention to duty and contemptuous, insubordinate and disrespectful behaviour." Bentinck requested an inquiry into the charges and was ultimately cleared. However, the incident would not die and in May 1821 in Paris, Bentinck and Ker were prepared to duel. Bentinck's uncle George Canning interceded and stopped the event.[2]

Bentinck returned to England and exchanged regiments with the plan of going to India. In May 1822, he was assigned as aide-de-camp to Canning, who had accepted the position of Governor-General of India. Instead, Canning became foreign secretary after the Marquess of Londonderry committed suicide. Canning requested both George and John be his non-stipendiary private secretaries "to wean them from their too great zeal in the chase and too great idleness in every other respect." John declined, joining the Life Guard Regiment, but George accepted the position.[2]

In 1824, the death of their eldest brother, Henry, the Marquess of Titchfield, caused another change of plans. John became the Marquess of Titchfield and George took his place in the Life Guards, "it being the duke of Portland's wish that he should now take to the army as his profession."[2]

Once again conflicts arose; in July 1825, Bentinck engaged a junior officer in a bloodless duel over an incident related to the mess accounts. Bentinck then left the regiment and took half-pay with the rank of major.[2]

In 1828, he ran unopposed as the Whig representative for King's Lynn before moving over to join the Conservative Party (via the Derby Dilly parliamentary faction) by about 1835–6. Bentinck held King's Lynn until his death.

Horse racing

Before his interest in active politics in the 1840s, Bentinck was far better known for his interest in "the Turf." He was a notorious gambler, often losing substantial amounts. Bentinck owned several successful racehorses and his stable, which he established at Goodwood, was renowned for its quality. During the 1845 season, it was estimated that he had won more than £100,000.[3]

Bentinck made strenuous efforts to eliminate fraud in the sport (although his own behaviour in fixing odds was not always scrupulous). In 1844, having exposed the winner of the Derby as a fraud,[4] he proposed a set of rules to cover horse racing. By a series of legal actions he also limited the corruption involved in making and settlement of bets, deriving from outdated legislation.[3] He is also credited with inventing the flag start at a race meeting at Goodwood. Prior to that races had been started by the starter shouting.[5] Although something of a "self-appointed vigilante", he is now seen as a great innovator and reformer of the sport.[6]

Though he was an "aristocratic dandy" who wore a new silk scarf every day, Bentinck's volatile temper again got him in trouble. He nearly lost his life in a duel over an unpaid debt. He fired his pistol in the air as his opponent, Squire Osbaldeston, an expert marksman, was flustered and missed, shooting Bentinck cleanly through the hat.[7]

Despite his success in horse racing, his father reportedly strongly disapproved of this activity, and the duke was delighted when his son returned to "the more elevated occupations of political society."[1] To commit himself to his political career, in 1846, Bentinck sold his entire stables and racing team for the bargain price of £10,000.[8]

Leader of the Protectionists

Bentinck first became prominent in politics in 1846 when he, with Disraeli, led the protectionist opposition to the repeal of the Corn Laws. Until he rose to speak against their repeal, he had not spoken a word in 18 years in Parliament.[2] Historians see Bentinck's participation as vital, for the majority of those who opposed repeal were country gentlemen, who were far more likely to follow the son of a Duke than Disraeli, an Anglicized Sephardic-Jewish literary figure, then of dubious repute. The Bentinck-Disraeli relationship culminated in Bentinck offering to provide a £25,000 loan for Disraeli's purchase of Hughenden Manor in 1848.[9]

Although Bentinck and Disraeli did not prevent the repeal of the Corn Laws, they did succeed in forcing Peel's resignation some weeks later over the Irish Coercion Bill.[10] The Conservative Party broke in half; some hundred free-trade Peelites followed Peel, while 230 protectionists formed the new Conservative Party, with Stanley (later the Earl of Derby) as overall leader. Bentinck became leader of the party in the House of Commons.[11] He unsuccessfully led calls upon the government of Lord John Russell to alleviate suffering in Ireland arising from the Great Famine of Ireland by investing in a substantial railway construction programme.[12]

Bentinck resigned the leadership in 1848, his support of Jewish emancipation being unpopular with the bulk of the party, and was succeeded by the Marquess of Granby.[13]

Death and legacy

Memorial to Bentinck on the path where he died, near Worksop

On 21 September 1848, Bentinck left his father's home at Welbeck Abbey at 3 pm, intending to walk 6 miles (9.7 km) through "The Dukeries" to Thoresby Hall to dine with Charles Pierrepont, 2nd Earl Manvers. A search party was sent to look for him when he did not arrive at Thoresby, and his body was ultimately found at 9 p.m. He was aged 46.

Initial reports stated it appeared he died of "apoplexy,"[1] but it is believed he died of a heart attack. Although there were rumours of suicide (or even murder),[7] his autopsy clearly showed emphysema and congestion of the lungs.[14] Bentinck, who was unmarried (there were rumours that he and his brother Lord Henry were, in the phraseology of the time, "woman haters"),[15] was buried in the Duke of Portland vault at Marylebone Old Church in London.

He is commemorated with a statue in London's Cavendish Square Gardens, a memorial close to the spot where he died near Worksop, and a large gothic memorial by Thomas Chambers Hine erected in Mansfield.[16]

The Cavendish Monument, Mansfield

Charles Greville (who had once been a partner of Bentinck in a horse-racing syndicate) wrote of him after his death: "He brought into politics the same ardour, activity, industry and cleverness which he had displayed on the turf . . . having once espoused a cause and espoused a party, from whatever motive, he worked with all the force of his intellect and a superhuman power of application in what he perceived to be the interest of that party and that cause . . . [However] I have not the least doubt that, for his own reputation and celebrity, he died at the most opportune period; his fame had probably reached its zenith, and credit was given him for greater abilities than he possessed."

The Department of Manuscripts and Special Collections at the University of Nottingham holds the correspondence and personal papers of Lord George Bentinck, as part of the Portland (Welbeck) Collection.

References

Notes
  1. "Biography of Lord George Bentinck". The Times. 23 September 1848. p. 5.
  2. "CAVENDISH BENTINCK, Lord William George Frederick (1802–1848)". The History of Parliament Trust. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  3. Macintyre (n.d.)
  4. Blake, Robert (1967). Disraeli (1998 paperback ed.). London: Prion Book Limited. p. 228. ISBN 1853752754.
  5. "Was It "Go" or "No"?". The Sunday Post. 1 August 1926. Retrieved 21 January 2014 via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. Barrett, Norman, ed. (1995). The Daily Telegraph Chronicle of Horse Racing. Enfield, Middlesex: Guinness Publishing.
  7. Archard, Charles J. (1907). "The Portland Peerage Romance". Nottinghamshire History, Ch. VI.
  8. MacIintyre (n.d.)
  9. Blake (1998 paperback) pp251-3
  10. Blake (1998 paperback) pp241-2
  11. Blake (1998 paperback) p248
  12. Walpole, Spencer (1889). The Life of Lord John Russell (2nd ed.). London: Longmans, Green and Co. pp. 443–5.
  13. Blake (1998 paperback) pp261-2
  14. MacIntyre (n.d.)
  15. "Sporting Notes", Sporting Times, 14 December 1907
  16. Llewellynn Jewitt (1874). The Stately Homes of England: Complete in Two Series. R. Worthington. p. 87.
Sources

Further reading

  • Benjamin Disraeli, Lord George Bentinck. A Political Biography (London, 1852).
  • Anna Gambles, Protection and Politics: Conservative Economic Discourse, 1815–1852 (Cambridge University Press, 1971).
  • Angus Macintyre, "Lord George Bentinck and the Protectionists: A Lost Cause?"; Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 39 (1989), pp. 141–165.
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