Robert Walpole
August 26, 2012
On this date in 1676, (Sir) Robert Walpole was born in England.
Educated at Eton and Cambridge, he represented King's Lynn in the House
of Commons for most of his adult life. He was named Secretary at War in
1708 and Treasurer of the Navy in 1710. That year he was imprisoned by
the Tories for leading the Whigs, the opposition party, and was barred
from office until 1715. He then became First Lord of the Treasury and
Chancellor of the Exchequer. Walpole was the only public official to
openly oppose the Spanish War, and was considered one of England's
greatest statesmen, according to freethought historian Joseph McCabe.
Walpole has often been called England's "first Prime Minister." Although
he publicly identified with the Church of England for political
expediency, biographer A.C. Ewald called him a "sceptic as regards
religion" (Sir R. Walpole, 1878). When Queen Caroline,
also a deist, lay dying, it was advised that the Archbishop be
summoned. Walpole, who was in attendance, remarked: "Let this farce be
played; the Archbishop will act it very well . . . . It will do the
Queen no hurt, no more than any good" (Lord Hervey's Memoirs). D. 1745.
“[Walpole was] a man whose life reflected a genial paganism, who regarded all creeds with the impartiality of indifference, and who looked upon religion as a local accident and as the result of hereditary influences.”
— Biographer A.C. Eward, Sir R. Walpole (1878)
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor (FFRF)
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