ST. JOHN, HENRY, VISCOUNT BOLINGBROKE

sĭn jŭn, bŏlˈĭngbrook, 1678–1751, English statesman.

Political Rise

Although he was one of England's great orators, Bolingbroke was also an unstable profligate, and he was generally distrusted. Yet he apparently believed sincerely in a kind of "Tory democracy," for which he was later much admired by Benjamin Disraeli. Entering Parliament in 1701, he associated himself with Robert Harley and eventually came to rival Harley as a Tory leader.

After the accession (1702) of Queen Anne he became a favorite of the powerful duke of Marlborough and was appointed (1704) secretary for war. However, he resigned when Harley was forced out of his post by the Marlborough-Godolphin faction in 1708. When the unpopularity of the War of the Spanish Succession and the Henry Sacheverell incident brought in a Tory ministry (1710) under Harley, St. John became a secretary of state.

St. John used the London Tory clubs and writers such as Jonathan Swift to influence public opinion in favor of his policies and carried on, despite protests from England's allies, separate peace negotiations with France. In 1712 he was created Viscount Bolingbroke, and by the influence of Abigail Masham, Queen Anne's favorite, he gradually rose to become the leading figure in the government. The Peace of Utrecht (1713) and Bolingbroke's intrigues preceding it were denounced by the Whigs, whose political influence he sought to weaken by the Occasional Conformity and Schism acts, directed against religious dissenters. He now broke completely with Harley, who was dismissed in 1714.

Flight to France

Bolingbroke's true intent is not known, but it is sure that, in anticipation of the succession of a pro-Whig Hanoverian to the throne, he negotiated with James Francis Stuart, the Old Pretender, and began replacing Whig officers, especially in the army, with Tories. Whatever plans he had were thwarted by the sudden death (1714) of Queen Anne and the peaceful succession of George I, who promptly dismissed Bolingbroke. He was impeached, but he fled to France before the trial and was then attainted by Parliament. In France, Bolingbroke helped plan the uprising of the Jacobites in 1715, but in 1716 he was dismissed from the service of the Old Pretender on suspicion of having given secret Jacobite plans to the English government. He abjured the Jacobite cause, but only in 1723 did he receive (with the help of a generous bribe) a pardon from George I.

Return to England

On his return to England, although excluded from the House of Lords, he exerted great political influence, at first supporting but later organizing strong opposition to Robert Walpole. He initiated new methods of opposition to the government, such as the use of parliamentary inquiries, and attacked the government in the pages of a new periodical, the Craftsman, to which he contributed a famous series of letters, including a "Dissertation upon Parties" (1735), under the signature of Occasional Writer.

Retirement

He retired from politics in 1735 and spent most his remaining years on his estates in France, where he devoted himself to political and philosophical writing. His numerous writings, in a lucid but rhetorical style that was greatly admired at that time, include Letters on the Study and Use of History (privately printed, 1735–36), The True Use of Retirement (1738), and Idea of a Patriot King (1749). His works were edited by David Mallet (5 vol., 1754) and several times thereafter.

Bibliography

See his correspondence (ed. by G. Parke, 1798); biographies by Sir Charles Petrie (1937) and H. T. Dickenson (1970); J. P. Hart, Viscount Bolingbroke, Tory Humanist (1965); I. Kramnick, Bolingbroke and His Circle (1968).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...daughter of Chief-Justice Oliver St. John, 5 ; second union of, with...were to inherit the honours of Viscount Bolingbroke, 6 ; his residence at Battersea...Presbyterian, 6 ; his longevity, 6 . St. John, Henry, son of Sir Walter St. John...
...on Bolingbroke, and how Bolingbroke used some of the chief notions...the Philosophical Works 1 Bolingbroke calls Locke my master, for...The Philosophical Works of Henry St. John , Lord Viscount Bolingbroke , 5 vols., London 1754...
THE LIFE OF HENRY ST. JOHN, LORD VISCOUNT BOLINGBROKE. THERE are some characters that seem...with the struggle than the victory. HENRY ST. JOHN, Lord Viscount BOLINGBROKE, was born in the year 1678, at Battersea...
...Mr. Pelham". The Right Honourable Henry Pelham died on the 6th of March, 1754...on which Mallet issued the works of Bolingbroke, or, as Garrick puts it in the Ode he...Black as the whirlwinds of the north, St. J ns fell genius issud forth, And Pelham...
...gifted but treacherous St. John 1 whom he succeeded...Montague, Harley and Bolingbroke, were foremost members...reputation. His successor, Henry Pelham, employed methods...the peerage in 1712 as Viscount Bolingbroke.
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journal articles on: St John Henry Viscount Bolingbroke  - 23 results

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...ought to mend? (Epistle to Bolingbroke, lines 161-78; TE 4...essay on Popes Epistle to Bolingbroke by considering its conclusion...life as a wit in the 1730s, Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke. (1) His soliloquy disrupted...
...Robert Harley and Henry St. John were coincidentally John Drummonds patrons. Drummond...and Earl Mortimer--and to Henry St. John, secretary of state for the...elevated to the peerage as Viscount Bolingbroke. Through their offices he...
...While Arbuthnot richly described John Bulls personality, physical...influenced him in fabricating the name John Bull. Alternatively, Arbuthnot...candidates: author and Tory activist Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke or "Bullingbroke," and Sir...
...Joseph Morphew, and his printer, John Barber, into custody and questioned...ministers and the Pretenders Court at St. Germains. If Swift knew of...third Earl of Strafford, and Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke, were seized, followed by the...
...Englands behalf by Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke, under the supervision...along with Bolingbroke, Burlington...City; Kenny). Bolingbroke, for one, cultivated...itself was John Trenchard and...Lady who P--st at the Tragedy...
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...describes the property in a poem to John Gay written in 1720, strangely...later built over, in part by St Catherines Convent School...the former Secretary of State, Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke, twenty years younger than Peterborough...
...Tory party dissidents around Viscount Bolingbroke and their magazine, The Craftsman...eighteenth-century Tory leader Henry St. John, Viscount Bolingbroke, and his allies (including...to liberal republicanism-Henry David Thoreau, Lysander Spooner...
...the rule of the Unitarian king John Sigismund, whose suzerain was...OMITTED In 1695, the philosopher John Locke, a devout man of Puritan...rationality, and in the 1720s Henry St John, Viscount Bolingbroke, Queen Annes former Secretary...
...1730s and early 1740s. Henry St Johns, Viscount Bolingbroke, idea of an incorruptible...role in the 1740s as John, Lord Carteret, in...Newcastle and his brother, Henry Pelham, his colleagues...expenditure positions saw Henry Pelham in opposition...
...newspapers, came swarming out of the rookeries in St Giles, Spitalfields and Shoreditch to drink, loot...Walt Disney in Chicago December 12th 1751 Death of Henry St John, Viscount Bolingbroke December 13th, 1901 Marconi achieves the first transAtlantic...
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encyclopedia articles on: St John Henry Viscount Bolingbroke  - 9 results

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BOLINGBROKE, HENRY ST. JOHN, VISCOUNT see St. John, Henry, Viscount Bolingbroke . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
ST. JOHN, HENRY, VISCOUNT BOLINGBROKE sin jun, bol ingbrook...Englands great orators, Bolingbroke was also an unstable...Spanish Succession and the Henry Sacheverell incident...1710) under Harley, St. John became a secretary of...
MARLBOROUGH, JOHN CHURCHILL, 1ST DUKE OF marl b...personal glory; the prosecution of Henry Sacheverell was unpopular; and...yielding power to Harley and Henry St. John (later Viscount Bolingbroke). The duke was falsely charged...
...However, the death (1689) of John Graham, Viscount Dundee , at Killiecrankie...center of intrigue for men like Henry St. John , Viscount Bolingbroke, and others like him who...until 1807, in the person of Henry Stuart , Cardinal York. Jacobite...
...the zenith of their early power (1710 14) under the leadership of Robert Harley , earl of Oxford, and Henry St. John , Viscount Bolingbroke. Their hegemony was broken after the accession of George I, and the party was discredited for its connections...
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