Last years of William Pitt, the Elder
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- Also called (from 1766):
- 1st Earl of Chatham, Viscount Pitt of Burton-Pynsent
- Byname:
- The Great Commoner
- Born:
- November 15, 1708, London
- Also Known As:
- The Great Commoner
- 1st Earl of Chatham, Viscount Pitt of Burton-Pynsent
- Role In:
- Seven Years’ War
Pitt fell back on his gout and his gardening. In 1765 an admirer left him a splendid estate at Burton Pynsent in Somerset, where he planted avenues of noble trees. He was frequently at Bath, where they stood up in the Pump Room when he drank the water. He now had the attacks of “gout in the head” that led to bouts of insanity.
When Bute resigned in 1763, he was succeeded by George Grenville, and Pitt’s attacks on the administration completed a breach between the two brothers-in-law. Pitt was becoming a champion of liberty, condemning the high-handed action taken by the ministry against a member of Parliament, John Wilkes, whose paper, the North Briton, had attacked the King’s speech at the opening of Parliament and who eventually had to flee abroad. Inactive in 1764 and 1765, Pitt reentered the stage in January 1766 to deliver a passionate plea for imperial liberty on behalf of the American colonists who had resisted the Stamp Act and to demand that act’s repeal.
In July the king asked him to form a ministry drawn from all sections of the houses of Parliament. Pitt’s judgment and wisdom were impaired at this time, and, never having paid attention to manoeuvring among political connections, he found it difficult to form a coherent ministry. It was a fiasco rightly called a “tessellated pavement” by his political opponent Edmund Burke. Pitt himself chose the secondary post of lord privy seal, for which he was created earl of Chatham, but this meant abandoning the House of Commons and the possibility of influencing it directly by his oratory there. The “Great Commoner” retired to the Lords and fell ill for another two years, leaving a rudderless government, under the luckless duke of Grafton and Charles Townshend, to abandon his policies. Engulfed in a black fit of insanity, Pitt withdrew completely and in 1768 resigned office. He acquired a group of followers in the House of Commons and, in an alliance with Lord Rockingham’s group of opposition Whigs, offered a threat to Lord North’s ministry, but this opposition was, in the end, without results.
Pitt’s last years were clouded by illness, yet he was to reappear in the House of Lords—with ever greater difficulty—as an elder statesman. He continued to plead for generous treatment of the American colonists though he did not wish to grant them independence, partly for fear of their falling into the hands of France; in 1775 he hurriedly introduced a bill designed to suspend repressive measures at Boston and to maintain the legislative authority of Parliament over the Colonies while using the Continental Congress established at Philadelphia as a body for assessing the monetary contributions of each colony. Although the bill was summarily rejected, it indicates how Pitt would have handled the American problem. His last speech, against any diminution of an empire based on freedom, closed a political career that had become devoted to a reconciliation of imperial power with constitutional liberty. Pitt died on May 11, 1778, falling back into the arms of his son William who was reading to him the passage in Homer’s Iliad on Hector’s farewell. He was buried in Westminster Abbey with all the funeral pomp he could have desired and with public grief.
Vera Muriel White