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{{short description|British politician (1749β1806)}} {{for|the Australian newspaper editor|Charles James Fox (editor)}} {{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}} {{Infobox officeholder | honorific-prefix = [[The Right Honourable]] | name = Charles James Fox | image = Charles James Fox by Karl Anton Hickel.jpg | imagesize = | smallimage = | caption = Portrait by [[Karl Anton Hickel]], 1794 | office = [[Foreign Secretary (United Kingdom)|Foreign Secretary]] | term_start = 7 February 1806 | term_end = 13 September 1806 | primeminister = [[William Grenville]] | predecessor = [[The Lord Mulgrave]] | successor = [[Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey|Viscount Howick]] | term_start1 = 2 April 1783 | term_end1 = 19 December 1783 | primeminister1 = [[The Duke of Portland]] | predecessor1 = [[Thomas Robinson, 2nd Baron Grantham|The Lord Grantham]] | successor1 = [[George Nugent-Temple-Grenville, 1st Marquess of Buckingham|The Earl Temple]] | term_start2 = 27 March 1782 | term_end2 = 5 July 1782 | primeminister2 = [[The Marquess of Rockingham]] | predecessor2 = [[David Murray, 2nd Earl of Mansfield|The Viscount Stormont]] <small>([[Northern Secretary]])</small> | successor2 = [[Thomas Robinson, 2nd Baron Grantham|The Lord Grantham]] | office3 = [[Leader of the House of Commons]] | term_start3 = 7 February 1806 | term_end3 = 13 September 1806 | primeminister3 = [[William Grenville]] | predecessor3 = [[William Pitt the Younger]] | successor3 = [[Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey|Viscount Howick]] | term_start4 = 27 March 1782 | term_end4 = 5 July 1782 | primeminister4 = [[The Marquess of Rockingham]] | predecessor4 = [[Lord North]] | successor4 = [[Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney|Thomas Townshend]] | office5 = [[Lord Commissioner of the Treasury]] | term_start5 = 9 January 1773 | term_end5 = 18 February 1774 | primeminister5 = [[Lord North]] | predecessor5 = [[Charles Jenkinson, 1st Earl of Liverpool|Charles Jenkinson]] | successor5 = [[Francis Ingram-Seymour-Conway, 2nd Marquess of Hertford|Viscount Beauchamp]]<br />[[Charles Wolfran Cornwall]] | office6 = [[Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty]] | term_start6 = 28 February 1770 | term_end6 = 20 February 1772 | primeminister6 = [[Lord North]] | predecessor6 = [[Charles Townshend, 1st Baron Bayning|Charles Townshend]]<br />[[Sir George Yonge, 5th Baronet|Sir George Yonge, Bt]] | successor6 = [[Thomas Bradshaw (MP)|Thomas Bradshaw]] | constituency_MP7 = [[Westminster (UK Parliament constituency)|Westminster]] | term_start7 = 1785 | term_end7 = 1806 | predecessor7 = Parliamentary scrutiny | successor7 = [[Alan Gardner, 1st Baron Gardner|Sir Alan Gardner, Bt]]<br />[[Hugh Percy, 3rd Duke of Northumberland|Earl Percy]] | term_start8 = 1780 | term_end8 = 1784 | predecessor8 = [[George Capel-Coningsby, 5th Earl of Essex|Viscount Malden]]<br />[[Thomas Pelham-Clinton, 3rd Duke of Newcastle|Lord Thomas Pelham-Clinton]] | successor8 = Parliamentary scrutiny | constituency_MP9 = [[Tain Burghs]] | term_start9 = 1784 | term_end9 = 1785 | predecessor9 = Charles Ross | successor9 = George Ross | constituency_MP10 = [[Malmesbury (UK Parliament constituency)|Malmesbury]] | term_start10 = 1774 | term_end10 = 1780 | predecessor10 = [[Arthur Chichester, 1st Marquess of Donegall|Earl of Donegall]]<br />[[Thomas Howard, 14th Earl of Suffolk|Hon. Thomas Howard]] | successor10 = [[Arthur Hill, 2nd Marquess of Downshire|Viscount Fairford]]<br />[[George Legge, 3rd Earl of Dartmouth|Viscount Lewisham]] | constituency_MP11 = [[Midhurst (UK Parliament constituency)|Midhurst]] | term_start11 = 1768 | term_end11 = 1774 | predecessor11 = [[John Burgoyne]]<br />[[Bamber Gascoyne (the elder)|Bamber Gascoyne]] | successor11 = [[Herbert Mackworth]]<br />[[Clement Tudway]] | birth_date = {{birth date|1749|1|24|df=y}} | birth_place = [[London]], [[England]] | death_date = {{death date and age|1806|9|13|1749|1|24|df=y}} | death_place = [[Chiswick]], [[Middlesex]], England | resting_place = [[Westminster Abbey]] | party = [[Whig (British political party)|Whig]] ([[Foxite]]) | spouse = [[Elizabeth Armistead]] | parents = {{plain list| * [[Henry Fox, 1st Baron Holland]] * [[Lady Caroline Lennox]]}} | relatives = [[Fox family (English aristocracy)|Fox family]] | profession = [[Wikt:statesman|Statesman]], [[Abolitionism in the United Kingdom|abolitionist]] | education = [[Eton College]] | alma_mater = [[Hertford College, Oxford]] | signature = Signatur Charles James Fox.PNG }} [[File:Fox (BaronHolland) Arms.png|thumb|[[Canting arms]] of Fox, Baron Holland: ''Ermine, on a chevron azure three fox's heads and necks erased or on a canton of the second a fleur-de-lys of the third'']] '''Charles James Fox''' (24 January 1749 β 13 September 1806), styled ''[[The Honourable]]'' from 1762, was a British [[British Whig Party|Whig]] politician and statesman whose parliamentary career spanned 38 years of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. He was the [[rival|arch-rival]] of the [[Tories (British political party)|Tory]] politician [[William Pitt the Younger]]; his father [[Henry Fox, 1st Baron Holland]], a leading Whig of his day, had similarly been the great rival of Pitt's famous father, [[William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham]] ("Pitt the Elder"). Fox rose to prominence in the [[House of Commons of Great Britain|House of Commons]] as a forceful and eloquent speaker with a notorious and colourful private life, though at that time with rather conservative and conventional opinions. However, with the coming of the [[American War of Independence]] and the influence of the Whig [[Edmund Burke]], Fox's opinions evolved into some of the most [[Classical radicalism|radical]] to be aired in the [[British Parliament]] of his era. Fox became a prominent and staunch opponent of King [[George III]], whom he regarded as an aspiring tyrant. He supported the [[American Patriots]] and even dressed in the colours of [[George Washington]]'s [[Continental Army|army]]. Briefly serving as Britain's first [[Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (UK)|Foreign Secretary]] during the ministry of the [[Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham|Marquess of Rockingham]] in 1782, he returned to the post in a [[Fox-North Coalition|coalition government]] with his old enemy, [[Lord North]], in 1783. However, the King forced Fox and North out of government before the end of the year and replaced them with the 24-year-old [[Pitt the Younger]]. Fox spent the following 22 years facing Pitt and the government from the opposition benches of the House of Commons. Though Fox had little interest in the actual exercise of power<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 264">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=264}}</ref> and spent almost the entirety of his political career in [[Political opposition|opposition]], he became noted as an [[anti-slavery]] campaigner, a supporter of the [[French Revolution]] and a leading parliamentary advocate of [[religious tolerance]] and individual liberty. His friendship with his mentor, Burke, and his parliamentary credibility were both casualties of Fox's support for France during the [[French Revolutionary Wars]], but Fox went on to attack Pitt's wartime legislation and to defend the liberty of religious minorities and political radicals. After Pitt's death in January 1806, Fox served briefly as [[Foreign Secretary (United Kingdom)|Foreign Secretary]] in the '[[Ministry of All the Talents]]' of [[William Grenville]] before he died on 13 September 1806, aged 57. ==Early life: 1749β1758== Fox was born in London on 24 January 1749, the second surviving son of [[Henry Fox, 1st Baron Holland]], and Lady [[Caroline Lennox]], a daughter of [[Charles Lennox, 2nd Duke of Richmond]].<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|pp=7β9}}</ref> Henry Fox (1705β1774) was an ally of [[Robert Walpole]] and rival of [[Pitt the Elder]], and had amassed a considerable fortune by exploiting his position as [[Paymaster of the Forces|Paymaster General of the Forces]]. Charles James Fox's elder brother [[Stephen Fox, 2nd Baron Holland|Stephen]] (1745β1774) became the 2nd Baron Holland, and his younger brother [[Henry Edward Fox|Henry]] (1755β1811) had a distinguished military career.<ref name="MI">{{harvnb|Mitchell|2007}}</ref> Fox was the darling of his father, who found Charles "infinitely engaging & clever & pretty" and, from the time that his son was three years old, apparently preferred his company at meals to that of anyone else.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=4}}</ref> The stories of Charles's over-indulgence by his doting father are legendary. It was said that Charles once expressed a great desire to break his father's watch and was not restrained or punished when he duly smashed it on the floor. On another occasion, when Henry had promised his son that he could watch the demolition of a wall on his estate and found that it had already been destroyed, he ordered the workmen to rebuild the wall and demolish it again, with Charles watching.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=10}}</ref> [[File:CharlesJamesFox ByJoshuaReynolds.png|thumb|Mezzotint, ''Ladies Sarah Lennox and Susan Strangeways, with Charles James Fox'' (1762) at Holland House; after the original by Sir [[Joshua Reynolds]], British Museum. Fox stands beside his first cousin Lady Susan Fox-Strangways (1743β1827), who holds a pigeon, while his aunt [[Lady Sarah Lennox]] (1745β1826) (his mother's youngest sister) leans out of a window above. In 1760, whilst at [[Eton College]], Fox had developed a schoolboy crush on Susan and composed a prize-winning Latin verse describing a pigeon he found to deliver his love-letters to her "to please both Venus its mistress and him".<ref>Lascelles, Edward, ''The Life of Charles James Fox'', London, 1936, p. 11</ref>]] Given ''carte blanche'' to choose his own education, Fox in 1758 attended a fashionable [[Wandsworth]] school run by a Monsieur Pampellonne, followed by [[Eton College]], where he began to develop his lifelong love of [[classics|classical literature]]. In later life he was said to have always carried a copy of [[Horace]] in his coat pocket. He was taken out of school by his father in 1761 to attend the coronation of [[George III]], who would become one of his most bitter enemies, and once more in 1763 to travel to [[the Continent]] (where he visited Paris and [[Spa, Belgium|Spa]]). On this trip Charles was given a substantial amount of money with which to learn to gamble by his father, who also arranged for him to lose his virginity, aged fourteen, to a Madame de Quallens.<ref name="MI"/> Fox returned to Eton later that year, "attired in red-heeled shoes and Paris cut-velvet, adorned with a pigeon-wing hair style tinted with blue powder, and a newly acquired French accent", and was duly flogged by [[Edward Barnard (provost)|Dr. Barnard]], the headmaster.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=16}}</ref> Charles Fox was once known as a [[Macaroni (fashion)|macaroni]], despite him being a tad too overweight to look decent in his tight clothing.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.eastleach.org/macaronis-dandies-macaroni-downs-eastleach/ |title=The Macaronis and Dandies of Macaroni Downs |access-date=1 February 2021 |archive-date=26 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220526102613/https://www.eastleach.org/macaronis-dandies-macaroni-downs-eastleach/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> These three pursuits β gambling, womanising and the love of things and fashions foreign β would become, once inculcated in his adolescence, notorious habits of Fox's later life. Fox entered [[Hertford College, Oxford]], in October 1764. His tutor there was [[William Newcome]]. By the standards of aristocratic students, he worked hard while at Oxford, especially at mathematics.<ref name="Trevelyan">{{harvnb|Trevelyan|1880|pp=50β51}}</ref> However, he was rather contemptuous of Oxford's "nonsenses".<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=8}}</ref> He left without graduating in spring 1766, to tour Europe with his family.<ref name="Trevelyan"/> He went on several further expeditions to Europe, becoming well known in the great Parisian salons, meeting influential figures such as [[Voltaire]], [[Jean-Jaques Rousseau]], [[David Hume]], [[Edward Gibbon]], the [[Louis Philippe II, Duke of OrlΓ©ans|duc d'OrlΓ©ans]] and the [[Marquis de Lafayette]], and becoming the co-owner of a number of racehorses with the [[Armand Louis de Gontaut|duc de Lauzun]].<ref name="MI"/> == Early career: 1768β1774== === Member of Parliament === For the 1768 general election, Henry Fox bought his son a seat in Parliament for the [[West Sussex]] constituency of [[Midhurst (UK Parliament constituency)|Midhurst]], though Charles was still nineteen and technically ineligible for Parliament. Fox was to address the [[House of Commons of Great Britain|House of Commons]] some 254 times between 1768 and 1774<ref name="MI"/> and rapidly gathered a reputation as a superb orator, but he had not yet developed the radical opinions for which he would become famous. Thus, he spent much of his early years unwittingly manufacturing ammunition for his later critics and their accusations of hypocrisy. A supporter of the [[Augustus Henry Fitzroy|Grafton]] and [[Lord North|North]] ministries, Fox was prominent in the campaign to punish the radical [[John Wilkes]] for challenging the Commons. "He thus opened his career by speaking in behalf of the Commons against the people and their elected representative."<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=26}}</ref> Consequently, both Fox and his brother Stephen were insulted and pelted with mud in the street by the pro-Wilkes London crowds.<ref>{{harvnb|RudΓ©|1962|p=162}}</ref> Between 1770 and 1774, Fox's seemingly promising career in the political establishment was spoiled. He was appointed to the [[Board of Admiralty]] by Lord North in February 1770, but on the 15th of the same month, he resigned due to his enthusiastic opposition to the government's [[Royal Marriages Act]], the provisions of which β incidentally β cast doubt on the legitimacy of his parents' marriage.<ref name="MI"/> On 28 December 1772, North appointed him to the board of the [[HM Treasury|Treasury]]; in February 1774, Fox again surrendered his post, this time over the Government's allegedly feeble response to the contemptuous printing and public distribution of copies of parliamentary debates. Behind these incidents lay his family's resentment towards Lord North for refusing to elevate the [[Baron Holland|Holland barony]] to an [[earldom]].<ref name="MI"/> But the fact that such a young man could seemingly treat ministerial office so lightly was noted at [[Noble court|court]].<ref name="MI"/> In 1773 he was taken advantage of by the swindler [[Elizabeth Harriet Grieve]]. She had lent him Β£300 for which she got his name to use as a customer of her advice. Fox was promised that Grieve could arrange a marriage for him to a West Indian heiress named Miss Phipps. Fox was so taken in that he started to powder his eyebrows in order that he might appeal to her. Grieve was eventually sent to trial but the resulting scandal resulted in news stories, rhymes and a play at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket.<ref name=fleecum>{{Cite ODNB |title=The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography |date=23 September 2004 |url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/65504 |pages=ref:odnb/65504 |editor-last=Matthew |editor-first=H. C. G. |access-date=6 March 2023 |place=Oxford |doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/65504 |editor2-last=Harrison |editor2-first=B.}}</ref> George III, also observing Fox's licentious private behaviour, took it to be presumption and judged that Fox could not be trusted to take anything seriously.<ref name="MI"/> After 1774, Fox began to reconsider his political position under the influence of [[Edmund Burke]] β who had sought out the promising young Whig and would become his mentor β and the unfolding [[American Revolution|events in America]]. He drifted from his rather non-ideological family-oriented politics into the orbit of the [[Rockingham Whig]] party. During this period, Fox became possibly the most prominent and vituperative parliamentary critic of Lord North and the conduct of the [[American Revolutionary War|American War]]. In 1775, he denounced North in the Commons as {{blockquote|the blundering pilot who had brought the nation into its present difficulties ... [[Pitt the Elder|Lord Chatham]], the [[Frederick the Great|King of Prussia]], nay, [[Alexander the Great]], never gained more in one campaign than the noble lord has lost β he has lost a whole continent.<ref name="MI"/>}} === American Revolution === Fox, who occasionally corresponded with [[Thomas Jefferson]] and had met [[Benjamin Franklin]] in Paris,<ref name="MI"/> correctly predicted that Britain had little practical hope of subduing the colonies and interpreted the American cause approvingly as a struggle for liberty against the oppressive policies of a despotic and unaccountable executive.<ref name="MI"/> It was at this time that Fox and his supporters took up the habit of dressing in buff and blue, the colours of the uniforms in [[George Washington|Washington's]] army. Fox's friend, the [[Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle|Earl of Carlisle]], observed that any setback for the British Government in America was "a great cause of amusement to Charles."<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=27}}</ref> Even after the [[Battle of Long Island]] in 1776, Fox stated that {{blockquote|I hope that it will be a point of honour among us all to support the American pretensions in adversity as much as we did in their prosperity, and that we shall never desert those who have acted ''unsuccessfully'' upon Whig principles.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=62}}</ref>}} On 31 October the same year, Fox responded to the King's address to Parliament with "one of his finest and most animated orations, and with severity to the answered person", so much so that, when he sat down, no member of the Government would attempt to reply.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=63}}</ref> Fox shared a mutual antipathy with [[George III]] that profoundly shaped Fox's political career. George III was among the most enthusiastic prosecutors of the [[American Revolutionary War]]. Fox became convinced, that George III was determined to challenge the authority of parliament and the balance of the constitution established in the [[Glorious Revolution]] of 1688 to achieve a continental-style tyranny. George III in return thought that Fox had "cast off every principle of common honour and honesty ... [a man who is] as contemptible as he is odious ... [and has an] aversion to all restraints."{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} On 6 April 1780 [[John Dunning, 1st Baron Ashburton]] introduced a motion, asking that "The influence of the Crown has increased, is increasing, and ought to be diminished". It was passed by the Commons in a vote of 233 to 215.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=108}}</ref> Fox thought that the motion is "glorious", saying on 24 April that: {{blockquote| the question now was ... whether that beautiful fabric [i.e. the constitution] ... was to be maintained in that freedom ... for which blood had been spilt; or whether we were to submit to that system of despotism, which had so many advocates in this country.<ref name="MI"/>}} Fox, however, had not been present in the House of parliament for the beginning of the Dunning debate, as he had been occupied in the adjoining eleventh-century [[Westminster Hall]], serving as chairman of a mass public meeting before a large banner that read "Annual Parliaments and Equal Representation".<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=109}}</ref> This was the period when Fox, hardening against the influence of the British Crown, was embraced by the radical movement of the late eighteenth century. When the shocking [[Gordon riots]] exploded in London in June 1780, Fox, though deploring the violence of the crowd, declared that he would "much rather be governed by a mob than a standing army."<ref>{{harvnb|Thompson|1963|p=78}}</ref> Later, in July, Fox was returned for the populous and prestigious parliamentary constituency of [[Westminster (UK Parliament constituency)|Westminster]], with around 12,000 electors, and acquired the title "Man of the People".<ref name="MI"/> == Foreign Secretary: 1782β1783== === Fox-North Coalition=== [[File:Reynolds Charles James Fox.jpg|thumb|left|Charles James Fox (1782) by [[Joshua Reynolds]]]] When North finally resigned under the strains of office and the disastrous American War in March 1782, after [[Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis|Earl Cornwallis]] surrendered at the [[Battle of Yorktown]], and was gingerly replaced with the new ministry of the [[Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham|Marquess of Rockingham]], Fox was appointed [[Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (UK)|Foreign Secretary]]. But Rockingham, after finally acknowledging the independence of the former [[Thirteen Colonies]], died unexpectedly on 1 July. Fox refused to serve in the successor administration of the [[William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne|Earl of Shelburne]], splitting the Whig party; Fox's father had been convinced that Shelburne β a supporter of the elder Pitt β had thwarted his ministerial ambitions at the time of the [[1763 Treaty of Paris|Treaty of Paris in 1763]].<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=137}}</ref> Fox now found himself in common opposition to Shelburne with his old and bitter enemy, Lord North. Based on this single conjunction of interests and the fading memory of the happy co-operation of the early 1770s, the two men who had vilified one another throughout the American war together formed a coalition and forced their Government, with an overwhelming majority composed of North's Tories and Fox's opposition Whigs, on to the King. The [[Fox-North Coalition]] came to power on 2 April 1783, in spite of the King's resistance. It was the first time that George had been allowed no role in determining who should hold government office.<ref name="MI"/> On one occasion, Fox, who returned enthusiastically to the post of Foreign Secretary, ended an epistle to the King: "Whenever Your Majesty will be graciously pleased to condescend even to hint your inclinations upon any subject, that it will be the study of Your Majesty's Ministers to show how truly sensible they are of Your Majesty's goodness." The King replied: "No answer."<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=169}}</ref> George III seriously thought of abdicating at this time, after the comprehensive defeat of his American policy and the imposition of Fox and North,<ref>{{harvnb|Pares|1953|p=120}}</ref> but refrained from doing so, mainly because of the thought of his succession by his son [[George IV of the United Kingdom|George, Prince of Wales]], the notoriously extravagant womaniser, gambler and associate of Fox.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=171}}</ref> Indeed, in many ways the King considered Fox his son's tutor in debauchery. "George III let it be widely broadcast that he held Fox principally responsible for the Prince's many failings, not least a tendency to vomit in public."<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=88}}</ref> [[File:William Pitt the Younger 2.jpg|thumb|right|1792 Portrait of [[Pitt the Younger]], attributed to [[Gainsborough Dupont]]]] ===Constitutional crisis=== Happily for George, the unpopular coalition would not outlast the year. The [[Treaty of Paris (1783)|Treaty of Paris]] was signed on 3 September 1783, formally ending the [[American Revolutionary War]]. Fox proposed an [[East India Bill]] to place the government of the ailing and oppressive [[British East India Company]], at that time in control of a considerable expanse of India, on a sounder footing with a board of governors responsible to Parliament and more resistant to Crown patronage. It passed the Commons by 153 to 80, but, when the King made it clear that any peer who voted in favour of the bill would be considered a personal enemy of the Crown, the Lords divided against Fox by 95 to 76.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=190}}</ref> George III now felt justified in dismissing Fox and North from government and in nominating [[Pitt the Younger]] in their place, the King appointed the youngest [[British prime minister]] to date at twenty-four years of age. Fox used his parliamentary majority to oppose Pitt's nomination, and every subsequent measure that he put before the House, until March 1784, when the King dissolved Parliament and, in the following [[1784 British general election]], Pitt was returned with a substantial majority. In Fox's own constituency of Westminster, the contest was particularly fierce. An energetic campaign in his favour was run by [[Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire]], allegedly a lover of Fox's who was said to have won at least one vote for him by kissing a shoemaker with a rather romantic idea of what constituted a bribe. In the end, Fox was re-elected by a very slender margin, but legal challenges encouraged, to an extent, by Pitt and the King<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=206}}</ref> prevented a final declaration of the result for over a year. In the meantime, Fox sat for the Scottish [[pocket borough]] of [[Tain Burghs (UK Parliament constituency)|Tain or Northern Burghs]], for which he was qualified by being made an unlikely [[burgess of Kirkwall]] in Orkney. The experience of these years was crucial in Fox's political formation. His suspicions had been confirmed. It seemed to him that George III had personally scuppered both the Rockingham-Shelburne and Fox-North governments, interfered in the legislative process and now dissolved Parliament when its composition inconvenienced him. Pitt, a man of little property and no party, seemed to Fox a blatant tool of the Crown.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=75}}</ref> However, the King and Pitt had great popular support, and many in the press and general population saw Fox as the trouble-maker challenging the composition of the constitution and the King's remaining powers. He was often caricatured as [[Oliver Cromwell]] and [[Guy Fawkes]] during this period, as well as [[Satan]].<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=73}}</ref> == Opposition: 1783β1797== [[File:William Pitt the Younger at Westminster.gif|thumb|upright=1.25|Pitt facing Fox in [[Anton Hickel]]'s ''[[The House of Commons, 1793β94]]'']] One of Pitt's first major actions as prime minister was, in 1785, to put a scheme of parliamentary reform before the Commons, proposing to rationalise somewhat the existing, decidedly unrepresentative, electoral system by eliminating thirty-six [[rotten boroughs]] and redistributing seats to represent London and the larger counties. Fox supported Pitt's reforms, despite apparent political expediency, but they were defeated by 248 to 174.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=214}}</ref> Reform would not be considered seriously by Parliament for another decade. In 1787, the most dramatic political event of the decade came to pass in the form of the [[Impeachment of Warren Hastings]], the [[Governor of Bengal]] until 1785, on charges of corruption and extortion. Fifteen of the eighteen Managers appointed to the trial were [[Foxites]], one of them being Fox himself.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=76}}</ref> Although the matter was really Burke's area of expertise, Fox was, at first, enthusiastic. If the trial could demonstrate the misrule of [[British India]] by Hastings and the [[East India Company]] more widely, then Fox's India Bill of 1784 β the point on which the [[Fox-North Coalition]] had been dismissed by the King β would be vindicated.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=77}}</ref> The trial was also expedient for Fox in that it placed Pitt in an uncomfortable political position. The premier was forced to equivocate over the Hastings trial, because to oppose Hastings would have been to endanger the support of the King and the East India Company, while to support him openly would have alienated country gentlemen and principled supporters like [[William Wilberforce|Wilberforce]].<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=78}}</ref> As the trial's intricacies dragged on (it would be 1795 before Hastings was finally acquitted), Fox's interest waned and the burden of managing the trial devolved increasingly on Burke. ===The Regency Crisis=== [[File:A-voluptuary.jpg|thumb|A [[James Gillray|Gillray]] [[caricature]] of the [[George IV of the United Kingdom|Prince of Wales]], an ally of Fox]] In late October 1788, George III descended into a bout of mental illness. He had declared that Pitt was "a rascal" and Fox "his friend".<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 80">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=80}}</ref> The King was placed under restraint, and a rumour went round that Fox had poisoned him.<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 80"/> Thus the opportunity revealed itself for the establishment of a regency under Fox's friend and ally, the [[George IV of the United Kingdom|Prince of Wales]], which would take the reins of government out of the hands of the incapacitated George III and allow the replacement of his "minion" Pitt with a Foxite ministry. Fox, however, was incommunicado in Italy as the crisis broke; he had resolved not to read any newspapers while he was abroad, except the racing reports.<ref name="Mitchell 1992 232">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=232}}</ref> Three weeks passed before he returned to Britain on 25 November 1788, and then he was taken seriously ill (partly due to the stress of his rapid journey across Europe). He would not recover entirely until December 1789. He again absented himself to [[Bath, Somerset|Bath]] from 27 January to 21 February 1789.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=81}}</ref> When Fox did make it into Parliament, he seemed to make a serious political error. In the Commons on 10 December, he declared that it was the right of the Prince of Wales to install himself as regent immediately. It is said that Pitt, upon hearing this, slapped his thigh in an uncharacteristic display of emotion and declared that he would "unwhig" Fox for the rest of his life. Fox's argument did indeed seem to contradict his lifelong championing of Parliament's rights over the Crown. Pitt pointed out that the Prince of Wales had no more right to the throne than any other Briton, though he might well have a better claim to it as the King's firstborn son. It was Parliament's constitutional right to decide who the monarch could be. There was more than naked thirst for power in Fox's seemingly hypocritical Tory assertion. Fox believed that the King's illness was permanent, and therefore that George III was, constitutionally speaking, dead. To challenge the Prince of Wales's right to succeed him would be to challenge fundamental contemporary assumptions about property rights and [[primogeniture]]. Pitt, on the other hand, considered the King's madness temporary (or, at least, hoped that it would be), and thus saw the throne not as vacant but as merely temporarily unoccupied.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=82}}</ref> While Fox drew up lists for his proposed Cabinet under the new Prince Regent, Pitt spun out the legalistic debates over the constitutionality of and precedents for instituting a regency, as well as the actual process of drawing up a [[Regency Bill]] and navigating it through Parliament. He negotiated a number of restrictions on the powers of the Prince of Wales as regent (which would later provide the basis of the [[Regency Act 1811]]), but the bill finally passed the Commons on 12 February. As the Lords too prepared to pass it, they learned that the King's health was improving and decided to postpone further action. The king soon regained lucidity in time to prevent the establishment of his son's regency and the elevation of Fox to the [[Prime Minister of Great Britain|premiership]], and, on 23 April, a service of thanksgiving was conducted at [[St Paul's]] in honour of George III's return to health.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=245}}</ref> Fox's opportunity had passed. ===French Revolution === [[File:Prise de la Bastille.jpg|thumb|The [[Storming of the Bastille]] on 14 July 1789]] Fox welcomed the [[French Revolution]] of 1789, interpreting it as a late [[Continental Europe|Continental]] imitation of Britain's [[Glorious Revolution]] of 1688. In response to the [[Storming of the Bastille]] on 14 July, he famously declared, "How much the greatest event it is that ever happened in the world! and how much the best!"<ref name="MI"/> In April 1791, Fox told the Commons that he "admired the new constitution of France, considered altogether, as the most stupendous and glorious edifice of liberty, which had been erected on the foundation of human integrity in any time or country."<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=266}}</ref> He was thus somewhat bemused by the reaction of his old Whig friend, [[Edmund Burke]], to the dramatic events across the [[English Channel|Channel]]. In his ''[[Reflections on the Revolution in France]]'', Burke warned that the revolution was a violent rebellion against tradition and proper authority, motivated by [[Utopia]]n, abstract ideas disconnected from reality, which would lead to anarchy and eventual dictatorship. Fox read the book and found it "in very bad taste" and "favouring Tory principles",<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=113}}</ref> but avoided pressing the matter for a while to preserve his relationship with Burke. The more radical Whigs, like [[Richard Brinsley Sheridan|Sheridan]], broke with Burke more readily at this point. Fox instead turned his attention β despite the politically volatile situation β to repealing the [[Test Act|Test]] and [[Corporation Act|Corporation]] Acts, which restricted the liberties of [[English Dissenters|Dissenters]] and Catholics. On 2 March 1790, Fox gave a long and eloquent speech to a packed House of Commons. [[File:A Birmingham toast, as given on the 14th of July, by the - Revolution Society (BM 1851,0901.538).jpg|thumb|''A Birmingham toast, as given on the 14 July'': Fox is caricatured by [[James Gillray|Gillray]] as toasting the anniversary of the [[Storming of the Bastille]] with [[Joseph Priestley]] and other Dissenters (23 July 1791)]] {{blockquote|Persecution always says, 'I know the consequences of your opinion better than you know them yourselves.' But the language of toleration was always amicable, liberal, and just: it confessed its doubts, and acknowledged its ignorance ... Persecution had always reasoned from cause to effect, from opinion to action, [that such an opinion would invariably lead to but one action], which proved generally erroneous; while toleration led us invariably to form just conclusions, by judging from actions and not from opinions.<ref name="Reid 1969, p. 261">{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=261}}</ref>}} Pitt, in turn, came to the defence of the Acts as adopted {{blockquote| by the wisdom of our ancestors to serve as a bulwark to the Church, whose constituency was so intimately connected with that of the state, that the safety of the one was always liable to be affected by any danger which might threaten the other.<ref name="Reid 1969, p. 261"/>}} Burke, with fear of the radical upheaval in France foremost in his mind, took Pitt's side in the debate, dismissing [[Nonconformist (Protestantism)|Nonconformists]] as "men of factious and dangerous principles", to which Fox replied that Burke's "strange dereliction from his former principles ... filled him with grief and shame". Fox's motion was defeated in the Commons by 294 votes to 105.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=262}}</ref> Later, Fox successfully supported the [[Roman Catholic Relief Act 1791]], extending the rights of British Catholics. He explained his stance to his Roman Catholic friend, [[Charles Butler (lawyer)|Charles Butler]], declaring:{{blockquote|the best ground, and the only ground to be defended in all points is, that ''action'', not ''principle'' is the object of law and legislation; with a person's principles no government has any right to interfere.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=260}}</ref>}} On the world stage of 1791, war with Great Britain was threatened more with Spain and [[Russian Empire|Russia]] than [[revolutionary France]]. Fox opposed the bellicose stances of Pitt's ministry in the [[Nootka Sound]] crisis and over the Russian occupation of the [[Ottoman Empire|Turkish]] port of [[Ochakiv]] on the [[Black Sea]]. Fox contributed to the peaceful resolution of these entanglements and gained a new admirer in [[Catherine the Great]], who bought a bust of Fox and placed it between [[Cicero]] and [[Demosthenes]] in her collection.<ref name="MI"/> On 18 April, Fox spoke in the Commons β together with [[William Wilberforce]], Pitt and Burke β in favour of a measure to [[Abolitionism in the United Kingdom|abolish the slave trade]], but β despite their combined rhetorical talents β the vote went against them by a majority of 75.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=267}}</ref> [[File:The-Hopes-of-the-Party-Gillray.jpeg|thumb|In ''The Hopes of the Party'' (1791), [[James Gillray|Gillray]] caricatured Fox with an axe about to strike off the head of George III, in imitation of the French Revolution.]] On 6 May 1791, a tearful confrontation on the floor of the Commons finally shattered the quarter-century friendship of Fox and Burke, as the latter dramatically crossed the floor of the House to sit down next to Pitt, taking the support of a good deal of the more conservative Whigs with him. Officially, and rather irrelevantly, this happened during a debate on the particulars of a bill for the government of Canada.<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=269}}</ref> Later, on his deathbed in 1797, Burke would have his wife turn Fox away rather than allow a final reconciliation. === "Pitt's Terror" === [[File:Tree of liberty.jpg|thumb|''The Tree of LIBERTY, β with, the Devil tempting John Bull'' (1798): Fox is caricatured by [[James Gillray|Gillray]] as [[Satan]], tempting [[John Bull]] with the rotten fruit of the opposition's Tree of liberty.]] Fox continued to defend the French Revolution, even as its fruits began to collapse into war, repression and the [[Reign of Terror]]. Though there were few developments in France after 1792 that Fox could positively favour,<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=124}}</ref> Fox maintained that the old monarchical system still proved a greater threat to liberty than the new, degenerating experiment in France. Fox thought of revolutionary France as the [[lesser of two evils]] and emphasised the role of traditional despots in perverting the course of the revolution: he argued that [[Louis XVI]] and the French aristocracy had brought their fates upon themselves by abusing the [[French Constitution of 1791|constitution of 1791]] and that the [[First Coalition|coalition of European autocrats]], which was currently dispatching its armies against France's borders, had driven the revolutionary government to desperate and bloody measures by exciting a profound national crisis. Fox was not surprised when Pitt and the King brought Britain into the war as well and would afterwards blame the pair and their prodigal European subsidies for the long-drawn-out continuation of the [[French Revolutionary Wars]]. In 1795, he wrote to his nephew, [[Henry Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland|Lord Holland]]: {{blockquote|Peace is the wish of the French of Italy Spain Germany and all the world, and Great Britain alone the cause of preventing its accomplishment, and this not for any point of honour or even interest, but merely lest there should be an example in the modern world of a great powerful Republic.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=162}}</ref>}} Rather ironically, while Fox was being denounced by many in Britain as a [[Jacobin (politics)|Jacobin]] traitor, across the [[English Channel|Channel]] he featured on a 1798 list of the Britons to be transported after a successful French invasion of Britain. According to the document, Fox was a "false patriot; having often insulted the French nation in his speeches, and particularly in 1786."<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=159}}</ref> According to one of his biographers, Fox's "loyalties were not national but were offered to people like himself at home or abroad".<ref name="MI"/> In 1805 [[Francis Horner]] wrote, "I could name to you gentlemen, with good coats on, and good sense in their own affairs, who believe that Fox...is actually in the pay of France".<ref>{{harvnb|Horner|1843|p=323}}</ref> But Fox's radical position soon became too extreme for many of his followers, particularly old Whig friends like the [[William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland|Duke of Portland]], [[William FitzWilliam, 4th Earl FitzWilliam|Earl Fitzwilliam]] and the [[Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle|Earl of Carlisle]]. Around July 1794 their fear of France outgrew their resentment towards Pitt for his actions in 1784, and they [[crossed the floor]] to the Government benches. Fox could not believe that they "would disgrace" themselves in such a way.<ref name="MI"/> After these defections, the Foxites could no longer constitute a credible parliamentary opposition, reduced, as they were, to some fifty MPs.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=136}}</ref> Fox, however, still insisted on challenging the repressive wartime legislation introduced by Pitt in the 1790s that would become known as "Pitt's Terror". In 1792, Fox had seen through the only piece of substantial legislation in his career, the [[Libel Act 1792]] ([[32 Geo. 3]]. c. 60), which restored to juries the right to decide what was and was not libellous, in addition to whether a defendant was guilty. [[E. P. Thompson]] thought it "Fox's greatest service to the common people, passed at the eleventh hour before the tide turned toward repression."<ref>{{harvnb|Thompson|1963|p=135}}</ref> Indeed, the act was passed by Parliament on 21 May, the same day as a [[Royal Proclamation Against Seditious Writings and Publications|royal proclamation against seditious writings]] was issued, and more libel cases would be brought by the government in the following two years than had been in all the preceding years of the eighteenth century.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} Fox spoke in opposition to the [[Speech from the throne|King's Speech]] on 13 December 1793, but was defeated in the subsequent division by 290 to 50.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=132}}</ref> He argued against war measures like the stationing of [[Hessian troops]] in Britain, the employment of royalist French Γ©migrΓ©s in the British army and, most of all, Pitt's [[Habeas Corpus Suspension Act 1794|suspension]] of [[habeas corpus]] in 1794. He told the Commons that: {{blockquote|We had no invasion to fear but an invasion of the constitution.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992| p=133}}</ref>}} In 1795, the King's carriage was assaulted in the street, providing an excuse for Pitt to introduce the infamous Two Acts: the [[Seditious Meetings Act 1795]], which prohibited unlicensed gatherings of over fifty people, and the [[Treasonable Practices Act]], which greatly widened the legal definition of [[treason]], making any assault on the constitution punishable by seven years' transportation. Fox spoke ten times in the debate on the acts.<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 140">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=140}}</ref> He argued that, according to the principles of the proposed legislation, Pitt should have been transported a decade before in 1785, when he had been advocating parliamentary reform.<ref>{{harvnb|Watson|1960|p=360}}</ref> Fox warned the Commons that: {{blockquote|if you silence remonstrance and stifle complaint, you then leave no other alternative but force and violence.<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 140"/>}} He argued that "the best security for the due maintenance of the constitution was in the strict and incessant vigilance of the people over parliament itself. Meetings of the people, therefore, for the discussion of public objects were not merely legal, but laudable."{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} [[File:Charles James Fox by Joseph Nollekens 1792.jpg|thumb|right|[[Marble]] [[Bust (sculpture)|bust]] of Fox by [[Joseph Nollekens]], 1792. [[Yale Center for British Art]]]] Parliament passed the acts. But Fox enjoyed a swell of extra-parliamentary support during the course of the controversy. A substantial petitioning movement arose in support of him, and on 16 November 1795, he addressed a public meeting of between two- and thirty-thousand people on the subject.<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 140"/> However, this came to nothing in the long run. The Foxites were becoming disenchanted with the Commons, overwhelmingly dominated by Pitt, and began to denounce it to one another as unrepresentative.<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 141">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=141}}</ref> == Political wilderness: 1797β1806== === Later life === [[File:Stealing-Off-Gillray.jpeg|thumb|In ''Stealing off'' (1798), Gillray caricatured Fox's secession from Parliament.]] By May 1797, an overwhelming majority β both in and outside of Parliament β had formed in support of Pitt's war against France. Fox's following in Parliament had shrivelled to about 25, compared with around 55 in 1794 and at least 90 during the 1780s. Many of the Foxites purposefully seceded from Parliament in 1797; Fox himself retired for lengthy periods to his wife's house in [[Surrey]].<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 141"/> The distance from the stress and noise of Westminster was an enormous psychological and spiritual relief to Fox,<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=146}}</ref> but still he defended his earlier principles: "It is a great comfort to me to reflect how steadily I have opposed this war, for the miseries it seems likely to produce are without end."{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} On 1 May 1798, Fox proposed a toast to "Our Sovereign, the Majesty of the People". The [[Charles Howard, 11th Duke of Norfolk|Duke of Norfolk]] had made the same toast in January at Fox's birthday dinner and had been dismissed as [[Lord Lieutenant of the West Riding of Yorkshire]] as a result. Pitt thought of sending Fox to the [[Tower of London]] for the duration of the parliamentary session but instead removed him from the [[Privy Council of the United Kingdom|Privy Council]].<ref>{{harvnb|Emsley|1979|p=67}}</ref> Fox believed that it was "impossible to support the [[Glorious Revolution|Revolution]] [of 1688] and the [[Act of Settlement 1701|Brunswick Succession]] upon any other principle" than the sovereignty of the people.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=152}}</ref> After Pitt's resignation in February 1801, Fox had undertaken a partial return to politics. Having opposed the [[Henry Addington|Addington]] ministry (though he approved of its negotiation of the [[Treaty of Amiens]]) as a Pitt-style tool of the King, Fox gravitated towards the [[William Grenville|Grenvillite]] faction, which shared his support for [[Catholic emancipation]] and composed the only parliamentary alternative to a coalition with the Pittites.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}} During the French Revolutionary Wars, Fox supported the French Republic against the monarchies that comprised the [[Second Coalition]].<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=165}}</ref> Fox thought the ''coup d'Γ©tat'' of 1799 that brought [[Napoleon]] to power "a very bad beginning ... the manner of the thing [was] quite odious",<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=166}}</ref> but he was convinced that the French leader sincerely desired peace in order to consolidate his rule and rebuild his shattered country. By July 1800, Fox had "forgiven" the means by which he had come into power and claimed Napoleon had "surpassed...[[Alexander the Great|Alexander]] & [[Caesar]], not to mention the great advantage he has over them in the Cause he fights in".<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=167}}</ref> In October 1801, a preliminary peace agreement between Britain and France was published and Fox was delighted. In a speech to his constituents on 10 October Fox said, "We have not, I acknowledge, obtained the objects for which the War was undertaken{{snd}}so much the better{{snd}}I rejoice that we have not. I like the Peace the more on this very account".<ref>''The Times'' (12 October 1801), p. 2.</ref> Many of his friends were shocked at such open language, but as Fox said in his reply to a remonstrance from Grey: "...the truth is, I am gone something further in hate to the English Government than perhaps you and the rest of my friends are, and certainly further than can with prudence be avowed. The triumph of the French Government over the English does in fact afford me a degree of pleasure which it is very difficult to disguise".<ref>[[E. A. Smith (historian)|E. A. Smith]], ''Lord Grey. 1764β1845'' (Alan Sutton, 1996), p. 86.</ref> After the subsequent Treaty of Amiens was signed in March 1802, Fox joined the thousands of English tourists flocking across the Channel to see the sights of the revolution. Fox and his retinue were kept under surveillance by officials from the British embassy during their trip of 20 July to 17 November.<ref name="MI"/> In Paris, he presented his wife for the first time in seven years of marriage, creating yet another stir back at court in London, and had three interviews with Napoleon, who β though he tried to flatter his most prominent British sympathiser β had to spend most of the time arguing about the freedom of the press and the perniciousness of a standing army.<ref name="MI"/> Fox's stay in France enabled him, through his connections with [[Talleyrand]] and [[Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette|Lafayette]], to search the French archives for his planned history of the reign of [[James II of Great Britain|James II]], the [[Glorious Revolution]] and the reign of [[William III of Great Britain|William III]]. Fox left the work unfinished at his death, however, and only covered the first year of James' reign (1685). It was posthumously published in 1808 as ''[[A History of the Early Part of the Reign of James II]]''.<ref name="MI"/> Fox confessed in December 1802 that he was "obstinate" in his belief that Napoleon's "wish is Peace, nay that he is afraid of war to the last degree".<ref name="Mitchell 1992 201">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=201}}</ref> In March 1803 he believed that Napoleon's belligerence towards [[Piedmont]], Malta and Switzerland was regrettable but did not constitute a ''[[casus belli]]'', writing to the Duchess of Devonshire "if I am to shew a feeling for the wounded honour of the country you or somebody must shew me the wound, for the life of me I cannot find as single instance since the definitive treaty where the Govt. of France has behaved ill to ''us''".<ref name="Mitchell 1992 201"/> When [[Napoleonic Wars|war]] broke out again in May 1803, Fox blamed the Prime Minister Henry Addington for not standing up to the King. The British government had not left Napoleon "any alternative but War or the most abject humiliation" and that the war "is entirely the fault of our Ministers and not of Bonaparte".<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=202}}</ref> Upon hearing of the spectacular French [[Battle of Ulm|victories at Ulm]] and [[Battle of Austerlitz|Austerlitz]] later in 1805, Fox commented: "These are wonders indeed but they are not ''much'' more than I expected".<ref name="Mitchell 1992 218">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=218}}</ref> When Pitt (who had taken over from Addington as premier in 1804) tried to persuade Prussia into an anti-French alliance, Prussia refused, to Fox's delight.<ref name="Mitchell 1992 218"/> He was a close friend and colleague of [[Samuel Whitbread (1764β1815)|Samuel Whitbread]] and supported by Fox, Whitbread in 1805, led the campaign to have [[Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville|Viscount Melville]] removed from office; Melville resigned. However, The House of Lords found Melville not guilty and he was acquitted of all charges.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tbpjAAAAcAAJ|title=The Trial of Henry Lord Viscount Melville|year=1806|publisher=Longman}}</ref> === Final year === [[File:Visiting the sick.jpg|thumb|In ''Visiting the Sick'' (1806), [[James Gillray]] caricatured Fox's last months.]] When Pitt died on 23 January 1806, Fox was the last remaining great political figure of the era and could no longer be denied a place in government.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} When Grenville formed a "[[Ministry of All the Talents]]" out of his supporters, the followers of Addington and the Foxites, Fox was once again offered the post of Foreign Secretary, which he accepted in February. Fox was convinced (as he had been since Napoleon's accession) that France desired a lasting peace and that he was "sure that two civil sentences from the Ministers would ensure Peace".<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=227}}</ref> Therefore, peace talks were speedily entered into by Fox and his old friend Talleyrand, now French foreign minister. The mood had completely changed by July, however, and Fox was forced to acknowledge that his assessment of Napoleon's pacific intentions was wrong.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|pp=229β230}}</ref> Negotiations over Hanover, Naples, Sicily, and Malta faltered and Talleyrand vetoed Russian participation in the negotiations. King George believed this was a ploy to divide Britain and Russia as French interests would suffer if she had to deal with an Anglo-Russian alliance. Fox was forced to agree that the King's belief was "but too well founded".<ref name="Mitchell 1992 232"/> In June, [[Lord Yarmouth]] was sent on a peace mission to Paris. Fox wrote to him: "I feel my own Glory highly interested in such an event, but to make peace by acceding to worse terms than those first suggested...wd. be as repugnant to my own feelings as it wd. be to the Duty I owe to K. & Country".<ref name="Mitchell 1992 234">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=234}}</ref> Yarmouth confirmed that Russia was negotiating separately with France. Fox was appalled at what he called this "extraordinary step".<ref name="Mitchell 1992 234"/> When Yarmouth reported successive new French demands, Fox replied that the British government "continues ardently to wish for the Conclusion of Peace". In August, [[James Maitland, 8th Earl of Lauderdale|Lord Lauderdale]] was sent to join Yarmouth (with full negotiating powers), and he reported back to Fox of "the complete system of Terror which prevails here". Fox's French friends were too frightened to call on him.<ref name="Mitchell 1992 235">{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=235}}</ref> [[File:Charles James Fox (1749-1806).jpg|thumb|left|Engraving of [[Joseph Nollekens]]' "last bust" of Charles James Fox (1808)]] Fox's biographer notes that these failed negotiations were "a stunning experience" for Fox, who had always insisted that France desired peace and that the war was the responsibility of King George and his fellow monarchs: "All of this was being proved false...It was a tragic end to Fox's career".<ref name="Mitchell 1992 235"/> To observers such as [[John Rickman (parliamentary official)|John Rickman]], "Charley Fox eats his former opinions daily and even ostentatiously showing himself the worse man, but the better minister of a corrupt government", and who further claimed that "He should have died, for his fame, a little sooner; before Pitt".<ref>Mrs. Henry Sandford, ''Thomas Poole and His Friends. Volume II'' (London: Macmillan, 1888), p. 160.</ref> Though the administration failed to achieve either Catholic emancipation or peace with France, Fox's last great achievement would be the [[Slave Trade Act 1807|abolition of the slave trade]] in 1807. Though Fox was to die before abolition was enacted, he oversaw a Foreign Slave Trade Bill in spring 1806 that prohibited [[British subject]]s from contributing to the trading of slaves with the colonies of Britain's wartime enemies, thus eliminating two-thirds of the slave trade passing through British ports.{{citation needed|date=September 2019}} On 10 June 1806, Fox offered a resolution for total abolition to Parliament: "this House, conceiving the African slave trade to be contrary to the principles of justice, humanity, and sound policy, will, with all practicable expedition, proceed to take effectual measures for abolishing the said trade..." The House of Commons voted 114 to 15 in favour and the Lords approved the motion on 24 June.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}}<ref>{{Cite web|title=Abolition of the Slave Trade. (Hansard, 24 June 1806)|url=https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/lords/1806/jun/24/abolition-of-the-slave-trade|access-date=17 August 2020|website=api.parliament.uk}}</ref> Fox said that: {{blockquote|So fully am I impressed with the vast importance and necessity of attaining what will be the object of my motion this night, that if, during the almost forty years that I have had the honour of a seat in parliament, I had been so fortunate as to accomplish that, and that only, I should think I had done enough, and could retire from public life with comfort, and the conscious satisfaction, that I had done my duty.<ref name="MI"/>}} === Death === [[File:Comforts-of-a-Bed-of-Roses-Gillray.jpeg|thumb|In ''Comforts of a Bed of Roses'' (1806), Gillray depicts [[Personifications of death|Death]] crawling out from under Fox's covers, entwined with a scroll inscribed "Intemperance, Dropsy, Dissolution".]] Fox died β still in office β at [[Chiswick House]], west of London, on 13 September 1806, not eight months after the younger Pitt. An autopsy revealed a hardened liver, thirty-five [[gallstones]] and around seven pints of transparent fluid in his abdomen.<ref name="MI"/> Fox left Β£10,000-worth of debts, though this was only a quarter of the Β£40,000 that the charitable public had to raise to pay off Pitt's arrears.<ref name="MI"/><ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=106}}</ref> Although Fox had wanted to be buried near his home in [[Chertsey]], his funeral took place in [[Westminster Abbey]] on 10 October 1806, the anniversary of his initial election for Westminster in 1780. Unlike Pitt's, Fox's funeral was a private affair, but the multitude that turned out to pay their respects were at least as large as those at his rival's service.<ref name="MI"/> == Private life == [[File:le coup de maitre.jpg|thumb|''Le Coup de Maitre. β This Print copied from the French Original, is dedicated to the [[London Corresponding Society]]'' (1797): a caricature of Fox by [[Gillray]], showing the Whig as a [[sans-culottes]] taking aim at the constitutional target of Crown, Lords and Commons.]] [[File:Gloria Mundi, or The Devil addressing the sun - Pare. Lost, Book IV LCCN2001695204.jpg|thumb|A caricature showing Fox standing on a roulette wheel perched atop a globe showing the [[British Isles]] and [[continental Europe]]. The implication is that his [[penniless]] state, indicated by turned-out pockets, is due to gambling.]] Fox's private life (as far as it was private) was notorious, even in an age noted for the licentiousness of its upper classes. Fox was famed for his rakishness and his drinking; vices which were both indulged frequently and immoderately. Fox was also an inveterate gambler, once claiming that winning was the greatest pleasure in the world, and losing the second greatest. Between 1772 and 1774, Fox's father{{snd}}shortly before dying{{snd}}had to pay off Β£120,000 of Charles' debts; the equivalent of around Β£{{Inflation|UK|.12|1774}} million in {{Inflation/year|UK}}. Fox was twice bankrupted between 1781 and 1784,<ref name="MI"/> and at one point his creditors confiscated his furniture.{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} Fox's finances were often "more the subject of conversation than any other topic."<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=101}}</ref> By the end of his life, Fox had lost about Β£200,000 gambling.<ref>{{harvnb|Olmert|1996|p=98}}</ref> In appearance, Fox was dark, corpulent and hairy, to the extent that when he was born his father compared him to a monkey.<ref name="MI"/> His round face was dominated by his luxuriant eyebrows, with the result that he was known among fellow Whigs as 'the Eyebrow.' Though he became increasingly dishevelled and fat in middle age, the young Fox had been very fashionable; he had been the leader of the [[Maccaroni (fashion)|'Maccaroni']] set of extravagant young followers of continental fashions. Fox liked riding horses and watching and playing [[cricket]], but his impulsive nature and considerable bulk led to his often being run out between wickets.<ref name="MI"/> Fox was frequently ridiculed β most famously by [[Gillray]], for whom he served as a stock [[Jacobin (politics)|Jacobin]] villain. The King disliked Fox greatly, regarding him as beyond morality and the corrupter of his own eldest son, and the late eighteenth-century movements of Christian evangelism and middle-class 'respectability' also frowned on his excesses. Fox was apparently not greatly bothered by these criticisms and kept a collection of his caricatures, which he found amusing.<ref name="MI"/> His friend, [[Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle]], said of him, since "the respect of the world was not easily retrievable, he became so callous to what was said of him, as never to repress a single thought, or even temper a single expression when he was before the public."<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=14}}</ref> Particularly after 1794, Fox rarely consulted the opinions of anyone outside of his own circle of friends and supporters.<ref name="MI"/> Fox was also regarded as a notorious womaniser. In 1784 or 1785, Fox met and fell in love with [[Elizabeth Armistead]], a former courtesan and mistress of the [[George IV of the United Kingdom|Prince of Wales]] who had little interest in politics or Parliament.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=179}}</ref> He married her in a private ceremony at [[Wyton, Cambridgeshire|Wyton]] in Huntingdonshire on 28 September 1795, but did not make the fact public until October 1802, and Elizabeth was never really accepted at court. Fox would increasingly spend time away from Parliament at Armistead's rural villa, St. Ann's Hill, near [[Chertsey]] in Surrey, where Armistead's influence gradually moderated Fox's wilder behaviour and together they would read, garden, explore the countryside and entertain friends. In his last days, the sceptical Fox allowed scriptural readings at his bedside in order to please his religious wife. She survived him by thirty-six years.<ref name="MI"/> Despite his celebrated flaws, history records Fox as an amiable figure. The Tory wit [[George Augustus Selwyn (politician)|George Selwyn]] wrote that, "I have passed two evenings with him, and never was anybody so agreeable, and the more so from his having no pretensions to it". Selwyn also said that "Charles, I am persuaded, would have no consideration on earth but for what was useful to his own ends. You have heard me say, that I thought he had no malice or rancour; I think so still and am sure of it. But I think that he has no feeling neither, for anyone but himself; and if I could trace in any one action of his life anything that had not for its object his own gratification, I should with pleasure receive the intelligence because then I had much rather (if it were possible) think well of him than not".<ref name="Christie, p. 143">{{harvnb|Christie|1970|p=143}}</ref> Sir [[Philip Francis (English politician)|Philip Francis]] said of Fox: "The essential defect in his character and the cause of all his failures, strange as it may seem, was that he had no heart".<ref name="Christie, p. 143"/> [[Edward Gibbon]] remarked that "Perhaps no human being was ever more perfectly exempt from the taint of malevolence, vanity, or falsehood."{{citation needed|date=September 2022}} Central to understanding Fox's life was his view that "friendship was the only real happiness in the world."<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=12}}</ref> For Fox, politics was the extension of his activities at [[Newmarket, Suffolk|Newmarket]] and [[Brooks's]] to [[Palace of Westminster|Westminster]].<ref name="MI"/> "Fox had little or no interest in the exercise of power."<ref name="Mitchell 1992, p. 264"/> The details of policy β particularly of economics β bored him, in contrast with the intensity of Burke's legal pursuit of Warren Hastings, and of Pitt's prosecution of the war against France. Moreover, the Foxites were "the witty and wicked" satellites of their leader, as much friends as political allies.<ref>{{harvnb|Mitchell|1992|p=265}}</ref> In a letter published in ''[[The Daily Telegraph]]'' in 2020, [[Lord Lexden]] compared him to Prime Minister [[Boris Johnson]], saying that "Johnson is an 18th Century figure in many ways" and that the two leaders may be commended in similar ways.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.alistairlexden.org.uk/news/whig-and-tory-lotharios-charles-james-fox-and-boris-johnson|title=Whig and Tory Lotharios β Charles James Fox and Boris Johnson|date=3 April 2020 |publisher=Lord Lexden|access-date=3 April 2020}}</ref> ==Legacy== In the 19th century, liberals portrayed Fox as their hero, praising his courage, perseverance and eloquence. They celebrated his opposition to war in alliance with European despots against the people of France eager for their freedom, and they praised his fight for [[civil liberties|liberties]] at home. The liberals saluted his fights for parliamentary reform, [[Catholic Emancipation]], intellectual freedom, and justice for the Dissenters. They were especially pleased with his fight for the abolition of the [[History of slavery|slave trade]]. More recent historians put Fox in the context of the 18th century, and emphasize the brilliance of his battles with Pitt.<ref>{{harvnb|Greaves|1973|pp=687β88}}</ref> A statue of Fox stands, alongside other notable Parliamentarians, in [[St Stephen's Chapel#As the House of Commons Chamber|St Stephen's Hall]] in the [[Palace of Westminster]].<ref name=ssstat>{{cite web|url=http://www.parliament.uk/about/living-heritage/building/palace/architecture/palace-s-interiors/st-stephen-s-hall/|title=parliament.uk: "Architecture of the Palace β St Stephen's Hall"|work=UK Parliament|access-date=4 October 2014}}</ref> While not wholly forgotten today Fox is no longer the famous hero he had been, and is less well remembered than [[Pitt the Younger|Pitt]].<ref name="MI"/> After 1794, the word 'Whig' gave way to the word "[[Foxite]]" as the self-description of the members of the opposition to Pitt. In many ways, the Pittite-Foxite division of Parliament after the French Revolution established the basis for the ideological [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservative]]-[[Liberal Party (UK)|Liberal]] divide of the nineteenth century. Fox and Pitt went down in parliamentary history as legendary political and oratorical opponents who would not be equalled until the days of [[Gladstone]] and [[Disraeli]] more than half a century later. Even Fox's great rival was willing to acknowledge the old Whig's talents. When, in 1790, the [[comte de Mirabeau]] disparaged Fox in Pitt's presence, Pitt stopped him, saying, "You have never seen the wizard within the magic circle."<ref>{{harvnb|Reid|1969|p=268}}</ref> The Fox Club was established in London in 1790 and held the first of its Fox dinners β annual events celebrating Fox's birthday β in 1808; the last recorded dinner took place at [[Brooks's]] in 1907.<ref name="MI"/> As [[Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey]] asked a [[Newcastle-upon-Tyne]] Fox dinner in 1819: "What subject is there, whether of foreign or domestic interest, or that in the smallest degree affects our Constitution which does not immediately associate itself with the memory of Mr Fox?"<ref name="MI"/> Fox's name was invoked numerous times in debates by supporters of [[Catholic Emancipation]] and the [[Great Reform Act]] in the early nineteenth century. [[John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford]] kept a bust of Fox in his pantheon of Whig grandees at [[Woburn Abbey]] and erected a statue of him in [[Bloomsbury Square]]. [[Sarah Siddons]] kept a portrait of Fox in her dressing room. In 1811, the [[George IV of the United Kingdom|Prince of Wales]] took the oaths of office as regent with a bust of Fox at his side. Whig households would collect locks of Fox's hair, books of his conflated speeches and busts in his likeness. The town of [[Foxborough, Massachusetts]], was named in honour of the staunch supporter of [[American independence]]. Fox is remembered in his home town of Chertsey by a bust on a high plinth (''pictured left''), erected in 2006 in a new development by the [[Chertsey railway station|railway station]]. Fox is also commemorated in a termly dinner held in his honour at his ''alma mater'', [[Hertford College, Oxford]], by students of English, history and the romance languages.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}} A statue of Fox by [[Edward Hodges Baily]] was erected in [[Westminster Hall]] in 1857.<ref>''[[Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660β1851]]'' by [[Rupert Gunnis]]</ref> Fox was the subject of the [[Epigraph (literature)|epigraph]] in [[John F. Kennedy]]'s Pulitzer-prize winning book ''[[Profiles in Courage]]'': "He well knows what snares are spread about his path, from personal animosityβ¦and possibly from popular delusion. But he has put to hazard his ease, his security, his interest, his power, even hisβ¦popularity. β¦He is traduced and abused for his supposed motives. He will remember that obloquy is a necessary ingredient in the composition of all true glory: he will rememberβ¦that calumny and abuse are essential parts of triumph. β¦He may live long, he may do much. But here is the summit. He never can exceed what he does this day." β [[Edmund Burke]]'s eulogy of Charles James Fox for his attack upon the tyranny of the East India Company. House of Commons, 1 December 1783<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jfklibrary.org/Asset-Viewer/Archives/JFKPP-027-003.aspx|title=Frontispiece: Item 3- Edmund Burke quotation, typescript|access-date=4 October 2014}}</ref> <gallery> File:Charles James Fox, NGS c.1802.JPG|Charles James Fox, c.1802, [[National Gallery of Scotland]] File:Charles James Fox - bust on plinth - Chertsey - 2006-08-10.jpg|[[Bust (sculpture)|Bust]] of Fox in [[Chertsey]], erected in 2005 File:CharlesJamesFox-BloomsburySquare.jpg|[[Statue of Charles James Fox]] in [[Bloomsbury Square]], London File:FoxMemorialMayfield.jpg|Memorial to Fox erected by [[William Chamberlayne (MP)|William Chamberlayne]] on his estate at Weston, now within [[Mayfield Park, Southampton]]. </gallery> Fox has been portrayed on screen by many actors: * [[Robert Morley]] in the 1942 film ''[[The Young Mr. Pitt]]'' * [[Leslie Banks]] in the 1947 film ''[[Mrs. Fitzherbert (film)|Mrs. Fitzherbert]]'' * [[Peter Bull]] in the 1954 film ''[[Beau Brummell (1954 film)|Beau Brummell]]'' * [[Ronald Lacey]] in the 1975 television series ''The Fight Against Slavery'' * [[Keith Barron]] in the 1979 television series ''[[Prince Regent (TV series)|Prince Regent]]'' * [[Jim Carter (actor)|Jim Carter]] in the 1994 film ''[[The Madness of King George]]'' * [[Hugh Sachs]] in the 1999 television miniseries ''[[Aristocrats (TV series)|Aristocrats]]'' * [[Michael Gambon]] in the 2006 film ''[[Amazing Grace (2006 film)|Amazing Grace]]'' * [[Simon McBurney]] in the 2008 film ''[[The Duchess (film)|The Duchess]]'' * [[Blake Ritson]] in a 2011 episode of the television series ''[[Garrow's Law]]'' {{Clear}} == References == === Note === ==== Bibliography ==== {{Reflist}} ====Sources==== * {{cite book|title=Myth and Reality in Late-Eighteenth-Century British Politics and Other Papers|last=Christie|first=I. R.|year=1970|publisher=Macamillan}} * {{cite book|title=British Society and the French Wars, 1793β1815|last=Emsley|first=Clive|year=1979|publisher=Macmillan}} * {{cite journal|title=Reviews of Books|last=Greaves|first=R. W.|journal=American Historical Review|date=June 1973|volume=78|issue=3}} * {{cite book|first=Francis|last=Horner|title=Memoirs and Correspondence of Francis Horner, M.P., Volume I|editor-last=Horner|editor-first=Leonard|editor-link = Leonard Horner|year=1843|publisher=John Murray|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7wJnAAAAMAAJ}} * {{cite book|title=The Life of Charles James Fox|last=Lascelles|first=Edward|year=1936|publisher=Oxford University Press}} * {{cite book|title=Charles James Fox|url=https://archive.org/details/charlesjamesfox00mitc|url-access=registration|last=Mitchell|first=Leslie|year=1992|doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198201045.001.0001|isbn=9780198201045}} [https://archive.org/details/charlesjamesfox00mitc online free to borrow] * {{cite video|author=Mitchell, Leslie|title=Charles James Fox|date=2007|publisher=[[Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]]|ref={{harvid|Mitchell|2007}}}} * {{cite book|title=Milton's Teeth and Ovid's Umbrella: Curiouser & Curiouser Adventures in History|last=Olmert|first=Michael|year=1996|publisher=Simon & Schuster|location=New York|isbn=0-684-80164-7|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/miltonsteethovid00olme}} * {{cite book|title=King George III and the Politicians|last=Pares|first=Richard|year=1953|url=https://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=7861542|access-date=25 August 2017|archive-date=20 August 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110820110021/http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=7861542|url-status=dead}} * {{cite book|title=Charles James Fox: A Man for the People|url=https://archive.org/details/charlesjamesfoxm00reid|url-access=registration|last=Reid|first=Loren|year=1969|publisher=[Columbia] University of Missouri Press |isbn=9780826200761 }} [https://archive.org/details/charlesjamesfoxm00reid online free to borrow] * {{cite book|title=Wilkes & Liberty|last=RudΓ©|first=George|year=1962}} * {{cite book|title=The Making of the English Working Class|url=https://archive.org/details/makingofenglishw0000thom|url-access=registration|last=Thompson|first=E.P.|year=1963|author-link=E.P. Thompson}} * {{cite book|title=The Reign of George III, 1760β1815|last=Watson|first=J. Steven|year=1960|url=https://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=22810171|access-date=25 August 2017|archive-date=22 August 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110822082643/http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=22810171|url-status=dead}} ===== Primary sources ===== * {{cite book|title=The Speeches of the Right Honourable Charles James Fox in the House of Commons|publisher=Aylott and Company|last=Fox|first=Charles James|year=1853|url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_4EEJiAHWgk8C|quote=charles james fox.}} == Further reading == === Books === * Christie, Ian R. (1958) "Charles James Fox" ''History Today'' (Feb 1958) 8#2 pp 110β118. * {{cite book|title=Charles James Fox|last=Derry|first=John W.|authorlink=John W. Derry|year=1972|publisher=St. Martin's Press|location=New York}} * Kanter, Douglas. "The Foxite Whigs, Irish legislative independence and the Act of Union, 1785β1806." ''Irish Historical Studies'' 36.143 (2009): 332β348. * {{cite ODNB|title=[[Oxford Dictionary of National Biography]]|last=Mitchell|first=Leslie|year=2004|chapter=Fox, Charles James (1749β1806)|doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/10024 |chapter-url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/10024|access-date=8 March 2008}} * Powell, Martyn J. "Charles James Fox and Ireland" ''Irish Historical Studies'' (2003) 33#130 pp 169β190. * {{cite EB9 |wstitle = Charles James Fox |volume= IX |last= Rae |first= William Fraser |author-link= William Fraser Rae| page= |short=1 }} * {{cite book|title=George the Third and Charles Fox: The Concluding Part of the American Revolution|last=Trevelyan|first=George Otto|year=1912|volume=1|author-link=Sir George Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet|url=https://archive.org/details/georgethirdandc04trevgoog}} * {{cite book|title=George the Third and Charles Fox: The Concluding Part of the American Revolution|last=Trevelyan|first=George Otto|year=1912|volume=2|author-link=Sir George Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet|url=https://archive.org/details/georgethirdandc00trevgoog}} * {{cite book|title=The Early History of Charles James Fox|last=Trevelyan|first=George Otto|year=1880|author-link=Sir George Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet|url=https://archive.org/details/earlyhistorycha04trevgoog}} == External links == {{commons category|Charles James Fox}} {{wikisource author}} {{wikiquote}} * {{Gutenberg author |id=1413| name=Charles James Fox}} ** {{Gutenberg|no=4245|name=History of the Early Part of the Reign of James the Second}} * {{Librivox author|id=18641}} * {{Internet Archive author |sname=Charles James Fox |sopt=t}} * [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/columnist/story/0,,1754429,00.html Guardian article] on Fox as the 200th anniversary of his death approaches * [https://www.bbc.co.uk/london/content/articles/2006/09/13/charles_fox_feature.shtml BBC article] {{s-start}} {{s-par|gb}} {{s-bef| before = [[Bamber Gascoyne (the elder)|Bamber Gascoyne]] <br /> [[John Burgoyne]] }} {{s-ttl| title = Member of Parliament for [[Midhurst (UK Parliament constituency)|Midhurst]] | with = [[Henry Fox-Strangways, 2nd Earl of Ilchester|Lord Stavordale]] | years = [[1768 British general election|1768]]β[[1774 British general election|1774]] }} {{s-aft| after = [[Sir Herbert Mackworth, 1st Baronet|Herbert Mackworth]] <br /> [[Clement Tudway]] }} {{s-bef| before = [[Arthur Chichester, 1st Marquess of Donegall|Earl of Donegall]] <br /> [[Thomas Howard, 14th Earl of Suffolk|Hon. Thomas Howard]] }} {{s-ttl| title = Member of Parliament for [[Malmesbury (UK Parliament constituency)|Malmesbury]] | with = [[William Strahan (publisher)|William Strahan]] | years = [[1774 British general election|1774]]β[[1780 British general election|1780]] }} {{s-aft| after = [[George Legge, 3rd Earl of Dartmouth|Viscount Lewisham]] <br /> [[Arthur Hill, 2nd Marquess of Downshire|Viscount Fairford]] }} {{s-bef| before = [[Thomas Pelham-Clinton, 3rd Duke of Newcastle-under-Lyne|Lord Thomas Pelham-Clinton]] <br /> [[George Capell-Coningsby, 5th Earl of Essex|Viscount Malden]] }} {{s-ttl| title = Member of Parliament for [[Westminster (UK Parliament constituency)|Westminster]] | with = [[George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney|Sir George Rodney, Bt]] 1780β1782 | with2 = [[Sir Cecil Wray, 13th Baronet|Sir Cecil Wray, Bt]] 1782β1784 | with3 = [[Samuel Hood, 1st Viscount Hood|Samuel Hood]] 1784β1788, 1790β1796 | with4 = [[Lord John Townshend]] 1788β1790 | with5 = [[Alan Gardner, 1st Baron Gardner|Sir Alan Gardner, Bt]] 1796β1801 | years = [[1780 British general election|1780]]β[[1801 United Kingdom general election|1801]] }} {{s-aft| after = Parliament of the United Kingdom }} {{s-bef| before = [[Charles Ross (died 1797)|Charles Ross]] }} {{s-ttl| title = Member of Parliament for [[Tain Burghs]] | years = [[1784 British general election|1784]]β1786 }} {{s-aft| after = [[George Ross (1700-1786)|George Ross]] }} {{s-par|uk}} {{s-bef| before = Parliament of Great Britain }} {{s-ttl| title = Member of Parliament for [[Westminster (UK Parliament constituency)|Westminster]] | with = [[Alan Gardner, 1st Baron Gardner|Sir Alan Gardner, Bt]] | years = [[1801 United Kingdom general election|1801]]β1806 }} {{s-aft| after = [[Alan Gardner, 1st Baron Gardner|Sir Alan Gardner, Bt]] <br /> [[Hugh Percy, 3rd Duke of Northumberland|Earl Percy]] }} {{s-off}} {{s-new| post}} {{s-ttl |title=[[Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (UK)|Foreign Secretary]] |years=1782|before=New Office }} {{s-aft|after=[[Thomas Robinson, 2nd Baron Grantham|The Lord Grantham]]}} {{succession box|title=[[Leader of the House of Commons]]|before=[[Lord North]]|after=[[Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney|Thomas Townshend]]|years=1782}} {{succession box|title=[[Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (UK)|Foreign Secretary]]|before=[[Thomas Robinson, 2nd Baron Grantham|The Lord Grantham]]|after=[[George Nugent-Temple-Grenville, 1st Marquess of Buckingham|The Earl Temple]]|years=1783}} {{s-bef| before = [[Thomas Townshend, 1st Viscount Sydney|Thomas Townshend]] }} {{s-ttl| title = [[Leader of the House of Commons]] | with = [[Lord North]] | years = 1783 }} {{s-aft| after = [[William Pitt the Younger|William Pitt]] }} {{s-bef| before = [[The Lord Mulgrave]] }} {{s-ttl| title = [[Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (UK)|Foreign Secretary]] | years = 1806 }} {{s-aft| rows = 2 | after = [[Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey|Viscount Howick]] }} {{s-bef| before = [[William Pitt the Younger|William Pitt]] }} {{s-ttl| title = [[Leader of the House of Commons]] | years = 1806 }} {{s-end}} {{Foreign Secretary}} {{Leader of the House of Commons}} {{Leaders of the Opposition UK}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Fox, Charles James}} [[Category:1749 births]] [[Category:1806 deaths]] [[Category:Alumni of Hertford College, Oxford]] [[Category:British MPs 1768β1774]] [[Category:British MPs 1774β1780]] [[Category:British MPs 1780β1784]] [[Category:British MPs 1784β1790]] [[Category:British MPs 1790β1796]] [[Category:British MPs 1796β1800]] [[Category:British duellists]] [[Category:British radicals]] [[Category:British Secretaries of State for Foreign Affairs]] [[Category:Burials at Westminster Abbey]] [[Category:English abolitionists]] [[Category:Fox family (English aristocracy)|Charles James]] [[Category:Leaders of the House of Commons of Great Britain]] [[Category:Leaders of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom]] [[Category:Lords of the Admiralty]] [[Category:Members of the Ancient Order of Druids]] [[Category:Members of the Parliament of Great Britain for English constituencies]] [[Category:Members of the Parliament of Great Britain for Scottish constituencies]] [[Category:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for English constituencies]] [[Category:Members of the Privy Council of Great Britain]] [[Category:Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom]] [[Category:MPs for rotten boroughs]] [[Category:People educated at Eton College]] [[Category:People expelled from the Privy Council of Great Britain]] [[Category:People from Foxborough, Massachusetts]] [[Category:People from Westminster]] [[Category:Radicalism (historical)]] [[Category:UK MPs 1801β1802]] [[Category:UK MPs 1802β1806]] [[Category:Younger sons of barons]]
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