- William Henry Smith (politician)
William Henry Smith (24 June 1825 – 6 October 1891) was an English bookseller and newsagent of the family firm
A Long Distance Swim
"W.H. Smith: "Hooray - another stroke or two and we've done it."
Cartoon satirising Smith as rowing and Lord Salisbury, Prime Minister, swimming towards the end of the Parliamentary year to escape the twin waves of Free Education and Land Purchase, contentious issues of the time. Smith died three months after publication of the cartoon.
From Punch, 1891W H Smith , who expanded the firm and introduced the practice of selling books and newspapers at railway stations.He was elected a
Member of Parliament in 1868 and rose to the position ofFirst Lord of the Admiralty less than ten years thereafter. Because of his lack of military experience, he was perceived as a model for the character Sir Joseph Porter in "H.M.S. Pinafore ". In the mid-1880s, he was twiceSecretary of State for War , and laterFirst Lord of the Treasury andLeader of the House of Commons , among other posts.Biography
Smith was born in
London , the son of William Henry Smith (1792-1865). He was educated at Tavistock Grammar School before joining the business with his father in 1846. As a result of his involvement, the business became a household name (W H Smith ), and the practice of selling books and newspapers at railway stations began.In 1868, Smith was elected
Member of Parliament forWestminster as a Conservative, and was appointed Financial Secretary to theTreasury six years later when Disraeli returned asPrime Minister . In 1877 he becameFirst Lord of the Admiralty . The appointment of a man with no naval or military experience to govern theRoyal Navy was satirised byGilbert and Sullivan in the character of Sir Joseph Porter, KCB, in their 1878comic opera , "H.M.S. Pinafore "). W. S. Gilbert's "Pinafore" lyrics are scathing::"I grew so rich that I was sent":"By a
pocket borough into Parliament.":"I always voted at my party's call,":"And I never thought of thinking for myself at all.":"I thought so little, they rewarded me":"By making me the Ruler of the Queen's Navee!"Smith would be known by the derisive nickname "Pinafore Smith" during his three years in the post of First Lord. Smith held this office for three years until the Liberals returned to power.
In 1885 a redistribution of seats led to Smith now standing for the Strand division in Westminster, and served as
Chief Secretary for Ireland for a short period in the following year. He was twiceSecretary of State for War , the first time during Lord Salisbury's brief ministry between 1885 and 1886, and the second when the Conservatives won the 1886 General Election. He succeeded this appointment in 1887 asFirst Lord of the Treasury andLeader of the House of Commons , and becameLord Warden of the Cinque Ports in 1891, dying shortly afterwards atWalmer Castle . His widow was created Viscountess Hambleden, taking the title from the village close to the Smiths' country house ofGreenlands , near Henley-on-Thames. One of the few ministers personally close to Lord Salisbury (apart from the latter's nephewArthur Balfour ), Smith was dubbed "Old Morality" due to his austere manner and conduct.He was described by Henry Stratford Caldecott in an 1895
Johannesburg lecture as " [t] he "doyen"... of living English critics" in the dilation of theBaconian theory . It was Smith's famous letter to Lord Ellesmere in 1857 which, after its subsequent publication as a small volume entitled "Bacon and Shakespere " [sic] ": An Inquiry Touching Players, Play-Houses, and Play-writers in the Days of Elizabeth", that gave the field its impetus. [Caldecott: "Our English Homer", p. 6.]References
*Caldecott, Harry Stratford: "Our English
Homer ; or, the Bacon-Shakespeare Controversy" (Johannesburg Times P. & P. Works, 1895).Notes
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