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  1. 17 de ago. de 2017 · Lord Liverpool was Prime Minister from 1812 to 1827 and had led Britain through the later part of the Napoleonic Wars. He was the decisive player in Britain’s resumption of the gold standard in 1821. Parliamentary background. Definitive reports on cash payments resumption from the Commons and Lords Select Committees were presented on May 6 ...

  2. 9 de nov. de 2015 · With the U.S. primary season approaching, and the quality of debate showing the flaws in the existing candidates, I thought it worth pondering how a truly superior statesman, Robert Banks Jenkinson, second Earl of Liverpool (British prime minister, 1812-27) would set about winning a U.S. Presidential election (assuming he had the necessary birth qualification to participate.)

  3. Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth. 1801 - 1804. “Pitt is to Addington, As London is to Paddington” quipped the mean Canning, but that was unfair. Addington (1757-1844) was a better financier than Pitt, getting the wartime budget close to balance in 1803-04 through applying withholding to the new income tax.

  4. May 6, 1760 - February 4, 1816. Robert Hobart (1760-1816) Fourth Earl of Buckinghamshire from 1804. President of the Board of Control, 1812-16. Served in the American Revolutionary War, then as aide-de-camp to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, while serving as Pittite MP in the Irish and British House of Commons before being translated to the ...

  5. 2nd Earl of Liverpool Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 1770–1828: Charles Jenkinson 3rd Earl of Liverpool 1784–1851: Barony, viscountcy and earldom extinct: George Foljambe 1800–1869: Lady Selina Jenkinson 1812–1883: Baron Hawkesbury Viscount Hawkesbury Earl of Liverpool (second creation) Cecil Foljambe 1st Earl of Liverpool 1846 ...

  6. Lord Liverpool himself seems like a good candidate for prime minister he held good characteristics of a prime minister in that he was a good speaker and held a good sense of judgement. No only this but he had great experience having previously been foreign sectary and sectary for war. He was also highly respected by many of his colleges giving ...

  7. April 29, 1766 - February 8, 1851. Nicholas Vansittart (1766-1851) First Baron Bexley from 1823. Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1812-23. Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, 1823-28. Vansittart was the son of a governor of Bengal, lost at sea when he was four years old and was at Christ Church four years ahead of Liverpool, after which he was ...