Francis Osborne, 5th Duke of Leeds

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox officeholder Francis Godolphin Osborne, 5th Duke of Leeds, Template:Postnominals (29 January 1751 – 31 January 1799), styled Marquess of Carmarthen until 1789, was a British politician. He notably served as Foreign Secretary under William Pitt the Younger from 1783 to 1791. He also was Governor of Scilly. In 1790, he was made a Knight of the Order of the Garter. As a statesman, he is generally regarded as a failure, and his deep hostility to the newly independent United States damaged relations between the two countries.

Background and education

Carmarthen was the only surviving son of Thomas Osborne, 4th Duke of Leeds, by his wife, Lady Mary, daughter of Francis Godolphin, 2nd Earl of Godolphin, and Henrietta Godolphin, 2nd Duchess of Marlborough. He was educated at Westminster School and at Christ Church, Oxford.Template:Sfn

Political career

Portrait of the Duke of Leeds by Thomas Lawrence, 1796

Carmarthen was a Member of Parliament for Eye in 1774 and for Helston from 1774 to 1775; in 1776 having received a writ of acceleration as Baron Osborne, he entered the House of Lords, and in 1777 Lord Chamberlain of the Queen's Household and Captain of Deal Castle. In the House of Lords he was prominent as a determined foe of the prime minister, Lord North, who, after he had resigned his position as chamberlain, deprived him of the office of Lord Lieutenant of the East Riding of Yorkshire in 1780. He regained this, however, two years later.Template:Sfn

Early in 1783, Carmarthen was selected as ambassador to France, but he did not take up this appointment, becoming instead Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs under William Pitt the Younger in December of the same year.Template:Sfn Historian Jeremy Black says that in terms of foreign policy, Pitt and other leaders were disappointed with his performance as a minister. The Duke of Leeds, as he became upon his father's death in 1789, was anti-French but did not develop an active and aggressive foreign policy. Instead, King George III himself set the main lines of foreign policy before he became mentally disabled.<ref>Jeremy Black, British Foreign Policy in an Age of Revolutions, 1783-1793 (1994), pp. 55-56.</ref> Pitt's rejection of Leeds' anti-Russian policy was the final blow and he left office in April 1791.<ref>William Hague William Pitt the Younger.Template:Pageneeded</ref>

Leeds, who was hostile to the newly independent United States, did nothing to foster good Anglo-American relations: two future U.S. Presidents, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, who both served as the American ambassadors to Britain, complained about Leeds' obstructive attitude and "aversion to having anything to do with us".<ref>McCullough, David John Adams, Simon and Schuster New York (2001).Template:Pageneeded</ref> While Adams, who was somewhat of an Anglophile by inclination, was prepared to forgive and forget, Jefferson was not, and it can be argued that Leeds' only lasting achievement was to foster Jefferson's implacable hostility as President to the British government.<ref>McCullough, John Adams.Template:Pageneeded</ref>

Subsequently, Leeds took little part in politics: in 1792, hearing rumours that a new coalition might be formed, he unwisely offered himself as its head and met with a firm rebuff from both Pitt and the King.<ref>Hague, William William Pitt the Younger Harper Collins (2004).Template:Pageneeded</ref>

Family

Ancestral arms of the Osborne family, Dukes of Leeds

Leeds married firstly in 1773 Lady Amelia Darcy, daughter of Robert Darcy, 4th Earl of Holderness on 29 November 1773. Lady Amelia became Baroness Darcy de Knayth and Baroness Conyers in her own right in 1778. They were divorced in 1779.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Their marriage produced three children:

He married secondly Catherine, daughter of Thomas Anguish, in 1788 and had two more children:

  • Lord Sidney Godolphin Osborne (1789–1861); unmarried.
  • Lady Catherine Anne Sarah Osborne (1791–1878); married Major John Whyte-Melville on 1 June 1819 and had issue.

Leeds died in London in January 1799, aged 48, and was buried in the Osborne family chapel at All Hallows Church, Harthill, South Yorkshire. He was succeeded in the dukedom by his eldest son from his first marriage, George Osborne, 6th Duke of Leeds. His second son from his first marriage, Lord Francis Osborne, was created Baron Godolphin in 1832. The dowager Duchess of Leeds died in October 1837, aged 73. Leeds's Political Memoranda were edited by Oscar Browning for the Camden Society in 1884, and there are eight volumes of his official correspondence in the British Museum.Template:Sfn

References

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