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  1. Addington ministry. Henry Addington, a member of the Tories, was appointed by King George III to lead the government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 1801 to 1804 and served as an interlude between the Pitt ministries. Addington's ministry is most notable for negotiating the Treaty of Amiens, which marked a brief ...

  2. Henry Addington (1757-1844) First Viscount Sidmouth from 1805. Home Secretary, 1812-22. Minister without Portfolio, 1822-24. Speaker of the House of Commons, 1789-1801. Prime Minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1801-4. Lord President of the Council, 1805, 1806-7 and 1812. Lord Privy Seal, 1806. The son of the Pitt family’s physician, he ...

  3. Henry Addington was an unpopular prime minister and in 1804 large numbers of his own party turned against him and he decided to resign. The following year Addington was granted the title of Lord Sidmouth and agreed to serve as a minister in Pitt's government. However, he only served under William Pitt for six months.

  4. Browse our much-loved pub food menus below and book with The Henry Addington in London today. At The Henry Addington we’re proud pie connoisseurs, and you can be sure that you’ll enjoy our delicious pies, served under pastry or mash. Why not complement your traditional British pie with a perfectly poured cask ale, a glass of fine wine, or ...

  5. Letter to Hiley Addington (1 November 1804), quoted in Philip Ziegler, Addington: A Life of Henry Addington, First Viscount Sidmouth (1965), p. 227; I have said, and said most truly, that if the country was well governed, and its affairs ably conducted, I cared little in whose hands the Administration was placed.

  6. Francis Wheatley - Henry Addington, Later 1st Viscount Sidmouth - Google Art Project.jpg 4,670 × 5,851; 5.92 MB Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth Signature.svg 591 × 106; 8 KB Henry Addington.jpg 456 × 550; 96 KB

  7. Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth (1757-1844), Prime Minister. Regency Portraits Catalogue Entry. Sitter associated with 78 portraits Addington was invited to be Prime Minister in 1801, when William Pitt resigned after the King refused to grant Catholic MPs the right to sit in Parliament.