Postmaster General of the United Kingdom#History
{{Short description|Former cabinet position in the British government}}
{{Use British English|date=September 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2017}}
{{Infobox official post
| post = Postmaster General
| body = the United Kingdom
| insignia = Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (HM Government).svg
| insigniasize = 120px
| insigniacaption = Royal Arms as used by Her Majesty's Government
General Post Office
| image = 11.12.67 Présentation officielle du Concorde (1967) - 53Fi1742 (John Stonehouse).jpg
| imagecaption = Last in office
John Stonehouse
1 July 1968 – 1 October 1969
| style = Postmaster General
| residence =
| appointer = Monarch of the United Kingdom on advice of the Prime Minister
| appointer_qualified =
| precursor = Master of the King's Post
| formation = 1517
| first = Brian Tuke
{{small|as Master of the King’s Post}}
| last = John Stonehouse
| abolished = 1 October 1969
| succession = Overseen by the following:
Department of Trade and Industry
(1974–2007)
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy
(2007–2015)
Home Office
(1974–92)
Department for Culture, Media and Sport (1992– )
| salary =
| incumbent =
}}
Postmaster General of the United Kingdom was a Cabinet ministerial position in HM Government. Aside from maintaining the postal system, the Telegraph Act 1868 established the Postmaster General's right to exclusively maintain electric telegraphs. This would subsequently extend to telecommunications and broadcasting.
The office was abolished in 1969 by the Post Office Act 1969. A replacement public corporation, governed by a chairman, was established under the name of the Post Office (later subsumed by Royal Mail Group). The cabinet position of Postmaster General was replaced by a Minister of Posts and Telecommunications, with reduced powers, until 1974; most regulatory functions have now been delegated to the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, although Royal Mail Group was overseen by the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy before flotation.
History
In England, the monarch's letters to his subjects are known to have been carried by relays of couriers as long ago as the 15th century. The earliest mention of Master of the Posts is in the King's Book of Payments where a payment of £100 was authorised for Brian Tuke as master of the posts in February 1512.{{cite book |last=Brewer |first=J.S. |title=Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, of the Reign of Henry VIII |publisher=Longman, Green, Longman, & Roberts |year=1864 |location=London |pages=[https://archive.org/details/lettersandpaper12offigoog/page/n582 1454] |url=https://archive.org/details/lettersandpaper12offigoog |author2=Brewer, John Sherren |author3=Brodie, Robert Henry |author4=Gairdner, James }} Belatedly, in 1517, he was officially appointed to the office of Governor of the King's Posts, a precursor to the office of Postmaster General of the United Kingdom, by Henry VIII.Walker (1938), p. 37 In 1609 it was decreed that letters could only be carried and delivered by persons authorised by the Postmaster General.{{cite web |title=Division No. 1 (Postal Services Bill) [15 Jun 2000] – Column 1782 |work=Volume No. 613 – Part No. 104 |date=15 June 2000 |url=https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199900/ldhansrd/vo000615/text/00615-08.htm |access-date=17 August 2013 }}
In 1655 John Thurloe became Postmaster-General, a post he held until he was accused of treason and arrested in May 1660.{{cite web |url=http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/biog/thurloe.htm |title=John Thurloe, Secretary of State, 1616-68 |work=british-civil-wars.co.uk |date=23 April 2007 |access-date=16 November 2012}}
His spies were able to intercept mail, and he exposed Edward Sexby's 1657 plot to assassinate Cromwell and captured would-be assassin Miles Sindercombe and his group. Ironically, Thurloe's own department was also infiltrated: his secretary Samuel Morland became a Royalist agent and in 1659 alleged that Thurloe, Richard Cromwell and Sir Richard Willis - a Sealed Knot member turned Cromwell agent - were plotting to kill the future King Charles II. About forty years after his death, a false ceiling was found in his rooms at Lincoln's Inn, the space was full of letters seized during his occupation of the office of Postmaster-General. These letters are now at the Bodleian Library.{{cite journal|last=Papworth|first=Dorothy|title=John Thurloe|journal=Wisbech Society Report|volume=51|pages=14–16|date=1990}}
In 1657 an act of the Commonwealth Parliament, entitled 'Postage of England, Scotland and Ireland Settled', set up a system for the British Isles and enacted the position of Postmaster General. The act also reasserted the postal monopoly for letter delivery and for post horses. After the Restoration in 1660, a further act, the Post Office Act 1660 (12 Cha. 2. c. 35), confirmed this and the post of Postmaster-General, the previous Cromwellian act being void.
File:General-Letter-Office-1653-London.JPG
1660 saw the establishment of the General Letter Office, which would later become the General Post Office (GPO). A similar position evolved in the Kingdom of Scotland prior to the 1707 Act of Union.
{{Infobox UK legislation
| short_title = Postmaster-General Act 1831
| type = Act
| parliament = Parliament of the United Kingdom
| long_title = An Act for enabling His Majesty to appoint a Postmaster General for the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
| year = 1831
| citation = 1 Will. 4. c. 8
| introduced_commons =
| introduced_lords =
| territorial_extent =
| royal_assent = 11 March 1831
| commencement = 11 March 1831
| expiry_date =
| repeal_date =
| amends =
| replaces =
| amendments =
| repealing_legislation = Post Office (Repeal of Laws) Act 1837
| related_legislation =
| status = repealed
| legislation_history =
| theyworkforyou =
| millbankhansard =
| original_text = https://archive.org/details/statutesunitedk00britgoog/page/n30/
| revised_text =
| use_new_UK-LEG =
| UK-LEG_title =
| collapsed = yes
}}
The {{visible anchor|Postmaster-General Act 1831}} (1 Will. 4. c. 8) established the unified office of Postmaster General of the United Kingdom
The office was abolished in 1969 by the Post Office Act 1969. A new public corporation, governed by a chairman, was established under the name of the Post Office (the part later subsumed by Royal Mail), which also had responsibility for telecommunications and the Girobank). The cabinet position of Postmaster General was initially replaced by a Minister of Posts and Telecommunications with less direct involvement; this department was dissolved in March 1974,{{cite web |url=http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C844 |title= Records created or inherited by the Department of Trade and Industry, 1970-1974, Telecommunications and Post Division, and predecessors |website=The National Archives|date= |publisher= nationalarchives.gov.uk |access-date=27 June 2021}} with regulatory functions transferring to the Home Office, the Post Office retaining control of television licensing. Since 1992, most regulatory functions formerly conducted by the Postmaster General generally fall within the remit of the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, although the present-day Royal Mail Group was overseen by the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy until flotation.
Masters of the King's Post
class="wikitable" | |
Years | Master of the King's Post |
---|---|
1517–1545 | Brian Tuke |
1545–1566 | John Mason |
1566–1590 | Thomas Randolph |
1590–1607 | John Stanhope, 1st Baron Stanhope |
1607–1635 | Charles Stanhope, 2nd Baron Stanhope |
1637–1642 | Philip Burlamachi |
1642–1649 | Edmund Prideaux |
Postmaster under the Commonwealth
class="wikitable" | |
Years | Postmaster under the Commonwealth |
---|---|
1649–1653 | Edmund Prideaux |
1653–1655 | John Manley{{cite web |url=http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1660-1690/member/manley-john-1622-99 |title=Manley, John (c. 1622–99) |work=History of Parliament Online |year=2012 |access-date=13 April 2012}} |
1655–1660 | John Thurloe |
Postmasters General of England, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom
The earliest postmasters had responsibility for England and Wales. In 1707, on the Union with Scotland, the responsibility of the office was extended to cover the whole of the new Kingdom of Great Britain as well as Ireland, but with some powers held by a Post Office Manager for Scotland. By the Post Office (Revenues) Act 1710, with effect from 1711, the services were united, but with a Deputy Postmaster for Scotland. From 1784, there were also Postmasters General of Ireland, but under the Postmaster-General Act 1831, the postmasters based at Westminster became responsible for the whole of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.Chambers's Encyclopaedia: A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge: Vol. VIII (London: W. & R. Chambers, Ltd., 1901), [https://archive.org/stream/chamberssency08lond#page/347 p. 347] In 1922, the Irish Free State became independent, and in 1923 it established its own arrangements under a Postmaster General of the Irish Free State. In 1924 the title became Minister for Posts and Telegraphs.
class="wikitable" | |
Years | Postmaster General |
---|---|
1660–1663 | Henry Bishop |
1663–1664 | Daniel O'Neill |
1664–1667 | Katherine O'Neill, Countess of Chesterfield |
1667–1685 | Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington |
1686–1689 | Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl of Rochester |
1689–1691 | John Wildman |
=Two Postmasters General, 1691–1823=
From 1691 to 1823 there were two Postmasters General, to divide the patronage between the Whigs and Tories.
class="wikitable" border="1" | ||||
Year | colspan="2"|1st Postmaster General | 1st Party | colspan="2"|2nd Postmaster General | 2nd Party |
---|---|---|---|---|
1691 | rowspan="2" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="2" | Sir Thomas Frankland | rowspan="2"|
|style="background-color: {{party color|Tories (British political party)}}" | | Tory | ||
1708 | style="background-color: white" | | |||
1715 | style="background-color: white" | | |
|style="background-color: {{party color|Whig}}" | | Charles Cornwallis, 4th Baron Cornwallis | Whig | ||
1720 | style="background-color: white" | | |
|rowspan="3" style="background-color: white" | |rowspan="3"|Edward Carteret | rowspan="3"| | |
1725 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1733 | rowspan="3" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="3" |Thomas Coke, 1st Baron Lovel | rowspan="3" | | ||
1739 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1745 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1759 | rowspan="3" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="3"| Robert Hampden, 4th Baron Trevor | rowspan="3"|
|style="background-color: white" | | ||
1762 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1763 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1765 | style="background-color: white" | | |
|style="background-color: white" | | ||
1766 | style="background-color: white" | | |
| rowspan="3" style="background-color: white" | | rowspan="3"|Francis Dashwood, 11th Baron le Despencer | rowspan="3"| | |
1768 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1771 | rowspan="7" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="7"|Henry Carteret | rowspan="7"| | ||
1782 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1782 | style="background-color: white" |
| Charles Bennet, 4th Earl of Tankerville[http://www.falmouth.packet.archives.dial.pipex.com/id70.htm Falmouth packet archives] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20121216110211/http://www.falmouth.packet.archives.dial.pipex.com/id70.htm |date=16 December 2012 }}. Retrieved 9 June 2008 | | | ||
1783 | style="background-color: white" | | Thomas Foley, 2nd Baron Foley | | | |
1784 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1786 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1787 | rowspan="3" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="3" |Thomas de Grey, 2nd Baron Walsingham | rowspan="3" | | ||
1789 | style="background-color: {{party color|Tories (British political party)}}" |
|John Fane, 10th Earl of Westmorland |Tory | |||
1790 | rowspan="2" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="2"|Philip Stanhope, 5th Earl of Chesterfield | rowspan="2"| | ||
1794 | rowspan="2" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="2"|George Townshend, 1st Earl of Leicester | rowspan="2"| | ||
1798 | rowspan="3" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="3" |William Eden, 1st Baron Auckland | rowspan="3" | | ||
1799 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1801 | rowspan="2" style="background-color: white" |
|rowspan="2" |Lord Charles Spencer | rowspan="2" | | ||
1804 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1806 | style="background-color: white" | | |
|style="background-color: white" | | ||
1807 | rowspan="3" style="background-color: {{party color|Whigs (British political party)}}" |
|rowspan="3"|Thomas Pelham, 2nd Earl of Chichester | rowspan="3" | Whig
|style="background-color: {{party color|Tories (British political party)}}" | | Tory | |
1814 | style="background-color: white" | | | | ||
1816 | style="background-color: white" | | | |
=A single Postmaster General, 1823–1900=
In 1823 the idea of a Whig and a Tory sharing the post was abolished.
=Postmaster General, 1900–1969=
class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center;"
! colspan=2|Portrait ! width=240|Name ! colspan=2|Term of office ! Party ! Ministry |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Charles Vane-Tempest-Stewart, 6th Marquess of Londonderry | 10 April 1900 | 8 August 1902 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Salisbury IV |
---|
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Austen Chamberlain | 8 August 1902 | 6 October 1903 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Balfour |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Edward Stanley, Lord Stanley | 6 October 1903 | 10 December 1905 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Liberal Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2 | 75px | rowspan=2 | Sydney Buxton | rowspan=2 | 10 December 1905 | rowspan=2 | 14 February 1910 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Liberal | {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Campbell-Bannerman |
{{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Asquith I |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Liberal Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2 | 75px | rowspan=2 | Herbert Samuel | rowspan=2 | 14 February 1910 | rowspan=2 | 11 February 1914 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Liberal | {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Asquith II |
rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Asquith III |
style="background-color: {{party color|Liberal Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Charles Hobhouse | 11 February 1914 | 25 May 1915 | {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Liberal |
style="background-color: {{party color|Liberal Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Herbert Samuel | 26 May 1915 | 18 January 1916 | {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Liberal | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | Asquith Coalition |
style="background-color: {{party color|Liberal Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Joseph Pease | 18 January 1916 | 5 December 1916 | {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Liberal |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Liberal Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2 | 75px | rowspan=2 | Albert Illingworth | rowspan=2 | 10 December 1916 | rowspan=2 | 1 April 1921 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Liberal | {{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | Lloyd George I |
rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | Lloyd George II |
style="background-color: {{party color|Liberal Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Frederick Kellaway | 1 April 1921 | 19 October 1922 | {{Party shading/Liberal (UK)}} | Liberal |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Neville Chamberlain | 31 October 1922 | 12 March 1923 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Law |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2 | 75px | rowspan=2 | Sir William Joynson-Hicks, Bt. | rowspan=2 | 12 March 1923 | rowspan=2 | 28 May 1923 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative |
rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Baldwin I |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Sir Laming Worthington-Evans, Bt. | 28 May 1923 | 22 January 1924 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Vernon Hartshorn | 22 January 1924 | 11 November 1924 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour | {{Party shading/Labour}} | MacDonald I |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Sir William Mitchell-Thomson | 11 November 1924 | 7 June 1929 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Baldwin II |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| | Hastings Lees-Smith | 7 June 1929 | 2 March 1931 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Labour}} | MacDonald II |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Clement Attlee | 2 March 1931 | 3 September 1931 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | William Ormsby-Gore | 3 September 1931 | 10 November 1931 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | National I |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2|75px | rowspan=2|Sir Kingsley Wood | rowspan=2|10 November 1931 | rowspan=2|7 June 1935 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative |
{{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | National II |
rowspan=3 style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=3|75px | rowspan=3|George Tryon | rowspan=3|7 June 1935 | rowspan=3|3 April 1940 | rowspan=3 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | {{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | National III |
{{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | National IV |
rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | Chamberlain War |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2|75px | rowspan=2|William Morrison | rowspan=2|3 April 1940 | rowspan=2|7 November 1943 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative |
rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | Churchill War {{small|(All parties)}} |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2|75px | rowspan=2|Harry Crookshank | rowspan=2|7 November 1943 | rowspan=2|4 August 1945 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative |
{{Party shading/Coalition (UK)}} | Churchill Caretaker {{small|(Con.{{ndash}}Lib.N.)}} |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| | The Earl of Listowel | 4 August 1945 | 17 April 1947 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Labour}} | Attlee I |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Wilfred Paling | 17 April 1947 | 28 February 1950 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| | Ness Edwards | 28 February 1950 | 5 November 1951 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Attlee II |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | The Earl De La Warr | 5 November 1951 | 7 April 1955 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Churchill III |
style="background-color: {{party color|National Liberal Party (UK, 1931)}}" |
| | Charles Hill | 7 April 1955 | 16 January 1957 | {{Party shading/Liberal National}} | National Liberal | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Eden |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| | Ernest Marples | 16 January 1957 | 22 October 1959 | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Macmillan I |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative and Unionist Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2| | rowspan=2|Reginald Bevins | rowspan=2|22 October 1959 | rowspan=2|19 October 1964 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Macmillan II |
{{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Douglas-Home |
rowspan=2 style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| rowspan=2 | 75px | rowspan=2 | Tony Benn | rowspan=2 | 19 October 1964 | rowspan=2 | 4 July 1966 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Wilson I |
rowspan=4 {{Party shading/Labour}} | Wilson II |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| | Edward Short | 4 July 1966 | 6 April 1968 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| | Roy Mason | 6 April 1968 | 1 July 1968 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | John Stonehouse | 1 July 1968 | 1 October 1969 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour |
=Minister of Posts and Telecommunications, 1969-1974=
class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center;"
! colspan=2|Portrait ! width=220|Name ! colspan=2 width=300|Term of office ! width=100|Party ! width=100|Ministry |
style="background-color: {{party color|Labour Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | John Stonehouse | 1 October 1969 | 19 June 1970 | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Labour | {{Party shading/Labour}} | Wilson II |
---|
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative Party (UK)}}" |
| 75px | Christopher Chataway | 24 June 1970 | 7 April 1972 | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Conservative | rowspan=2 {{Party shading/Conservative (UK)}} | Heath |
style="background-color: {{party color|Conservative Party (UK)}}" |
| | John Eden | 7 April 1972 | 4 March 1974 |
See also
- Postmaster General (disambiguation)
- Postmasters General of Ireland
- Postmaster General for Scotland
- Postmaster and Deputy Postmaster for Canada 1763–1851 – who reported to the Postmaster General of the United Kingdom
- Postmaster General of Canada
- Postmaster General of Hong Kong – created in 1870 to replace the Royal Mail and under British administration until 1 July 1997
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [https://www.gbps.org.uk/information/downloads/tpm-info-sheets/BPMA_Info_Sheet_Postmasters_General_web.pdf Postmaster General PDF]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Postmaster General Of The United Kingdom}}
Category:Lists of government ministers of the United Kingdom
Category:Postal system of the United Kingdom
Category:Postmasters general of the United Kingdom
Category:Defunct ministerial offices in the United Kingdom