List of UK President, President of UK till Now, List of president of United Kingdom, List all the Presidents of United Kingdom up to date?, who is the president of united kingdom, Present UK President
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List of UK President, President of UK till Now, List of president of United Kingdom, List all the Presidents of United Kingdom up to date?, who is the president of united kingdom, Present UK President
Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
Sir RobertWalpole |
4 April |
15 May |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Whig |
Walpole/Townshend |
(1676-1745) |
1721 |
1730 |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
||
MP for King's Lynn until 1742 |
15 May |
11 February |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
Walpole |
|
Earl of Orford from 1742 |
1730 |
1742 |
|
||
|
1722, 1727, 1734, 1741 |
|
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|
Regarded as the first Prime Minister in the modern sense; the crash of the South Sea Bubble in 1720; the Licensing Act 1737; resigned after a failing performance in dealing with the War of Jenkins' Ear, which began in 1739, and accusations of corruption in 1742. |
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Spencer Compton, |
16 February |
2 July |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Carteret |
1st Earl ofWilmington |
1742 |
1743† |
|||
(1673-1743) |
- |
||||
|
Titular head of the Carteret Ministry; Increased tax on spirits; in poor health for much of his time as Prime Minister. †Died in office. |
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Henry Pelham |
27 August |
6 March |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Whig |
Carteret; |
(1694-1754) |
1743 |
1754† |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
Broad Bottom |
|
MP for Sussex |
1747 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|
||
|
Etered and saw to completion British involvement in the War of the Austrian Succession from 1744 to 1748; Jacobite Rising from 1745-1746; First Carnatic War (1746-1748); Reorganisation of the Royal Navy in the Consolidation Act 1749; Second Carnatic War (1749-1754); adoption of the Gregorian Calendar in 1752; Jewish Naturalization Act 1753;Marriage Act 1753. †Died in office. |
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Thomas Pelham-Holles, |
16 March |
16-Nov |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Newcastle I |
1st Duke ofNewcastle |
1754 |
1756 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1693-1768) |
1754 |
|
|||
|
Took over government from after his brother died in office; Controversially attempted to reduce interest on National Debt; Led Britain into the French and Indian War in 1754, absorbed, after the Fall of Minorca into the Seven Years War; replaced due to poor performance in the war. |
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William Cavendish, |
16-Nov |
25 June |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Devonshire/Pitt; |
4th Duke ofDevonshire |
1756 |
1757 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
1757 Caretaker |
|
(1720-1764) |
- |
|
|
||
|
Replaced Newcastle; The court-martial and execution of Admiral Byng; The government was largely run by William Pitt the Elder until dismissed for his opposition to the course of the continental war and the execution of Byng; Resigned at will of the King and due to public outrage at the execution of Byng. |
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Thomas Pelham-Holles, |
2 July |
26 May |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Newcastle II |
1st Duke ofNewcastle |
1757 |
1762 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1693-1768) |
1761 |
|
|||
|
Focused on the Seven Years War, prosecuted largely by Pitt the Elder as Secretary of State; Executed a strategy of continental war combined with expeditions against French colonies; Annus Mirabilis of 1759- Captured Senegal, Gambia, Louisbourg, Quebec, defended Madras and prevented a French invasion of Britain with naval victories at Lagosand Quiberon; George III's personal opposition led to a change of ministry. |
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Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
John Stuart, |
26 May |
8 April |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Tory |
Bute |
3rd Earl of Bute |
1762 |
1763 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1713-1792) |
- |
|
|||
|
First Scottish Prime Minister. Ended the dominance of the Whigs; Treaty of Paris (1763) ending the Seven Years' War; resigned after fierce criticism of Treaty of Paris concessions. |
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George Grenville |
16 April |
13 July |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Whig (Grenvillite) |
Grenville |
(1712-1770) |
1763 |
1765 |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
||
MP for Buckingham |
- |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
|
Briefly lowered domestic tax at the expense of the colonies, though this was rapidly repealed; introduced the unenforceable Stamp Act 1765 (which is popularly cited as one of the causes of the American Revolution). His repealing of the taxes he rolled out were for all except that on tea, which was used as a reason for the Boston Tea Party. |
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Charles Watson-Wentworth, |
13 July |
30 July |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig (Rockingham) |
Rockingham I |
2nd Marquess ofRockingham |
1765 |
1766 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1730-1782) |
- |
|
|||
|
Repealed the controversial Stamp Act 1765, inspired by protests from both American colonists and British manufacturers who were affected by it and its difficulty to enforce; introduced the Declaratory Act 1766. |
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William Pitt the Elder, |
30 July |
14 October |
Lord Privy Seal |
Whig (Chathamite) |
Chatham |
1st Earl ofChatham |
1766 |
1768 |
|||
(1708-1778) |
- |
||||
|
The first real Imperialist; credited with the birth of the British Empire; defeated France in Canada, thereby indirectly precipitating the French Revolution. |
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Augustus FitzRoy, |
14 October |
28 January |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig (Chathamite) |
Grafton |
3rd Duke ofGrafton |
1768 |
1770 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1735-1811) |
1768 |
|
|||
|
Attempted to reconcile with the American colonies. |
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Frederick North, |
28 January |
22 March |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Tory |
North |
Lord North |
1770 |
1782 |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
||
(1732-1792) |
1774, 1780 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
MP for Banbury |
Led Great Britain into the American Revolution; the Gordon Riots; attempted reform in Ireland; resigned after a vote of no confidence against the will of the King. |
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Charles Watson-Wentworth, |
27 March |
1 July |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig (Rockingham) |
Rockingham II |
2nd Marquess ofRockingham |
1782 |
1782† |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1730-1782) |
- |
|
|||
|
Acknowledged the independence of the United States; began a process of economic reform. †Died in office. |
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William Petty-FitzMaurice, |
4 July |
2 April |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig (Chathamite) |
Shelburne |
2nd Earl ofShelburne |
1782 |
1783 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1737-1805) |
- |
|
|||
|
Planned political reform; secured peace with the United States, France and Spain. |
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William Cavendish-Bentinck, |
2 April |
19-Dec |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Fox-North Coalition |
3rd Duke ofPortland |
1783 |
1783 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1738-1809) |
- |
|
|||
|
Titular head of the Fox-North Coalition. Attempted to reform the British East India Company, but was blocked by George III. |
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William Pitt the Younger |
19-Dec |
14 March |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Tory (Pittite) |
Pitt the Younger I |
(1759-1806) |
1783 |
1801 |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
||
MP for Appleby until 1784 |
1784, 1790, 1796 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
MP for Cambridge University from 1784 |
Youngest Prime Minister. India Act 1784; attempted to remove rotten boroughs; personally opposed to the slave trade; reduced the national debt due to the rebellion in the North American colonies; formed the Triple Alliance; Constitutional Act of 1791; the Macartney Embassy (1792-1794), first of its kind to China; war with France starting in 1793; Cape Colony (South Africa) taken 1795; introduced the first income tax; Act of Union 1800. |
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Henry Addington |
17 March |
10 May |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Tory (Pittite) |
Addington |
(1757-1844) |
1801 |
1804 |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
||
MP for Devizes |
1801 co-option, 1802 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
|
Negotiated the Treaty of Amiens with France in 1802. |
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William Pitt the Younger |
10 May |
23 January |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Tory (Pittite) |
Pitt the Younger II |
(1759-1806) |
1804 |
1806† |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
||
MP for Cambridge University |
- |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
|
Alliance with Russia, Austria and Sweden against France (Third Coalition); Battle of Trafalgar; Battle of Ulm; Battle of Austerlitz. †Died in office. |
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William Wyndham Grenville, |
11 February |
31 March |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Ministry of All the Talents |
1st Lord Grenville |
1806 |
1807 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1759-1834) |
1806 |
|
|||
|
Abolition of the slave trade. |
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William Cavendish-Bentinck, |
31 March |
04-Oct |
First Lord of the Treasury |
nominallyTory |
Portland II |
3rd Duke ofPortland |
1807 |
1809 |
|||
(1738-1809) |
1807 |
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|
He headed a Tory government; was old and ill, leaving the Cabinet to their own devices (largely headed by Spencer Perceval). |
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Spencer Perceval |
04-Oct |
11 May |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Tory |
Perceval |
(1762-1812) |
1809 |
1812† |
Chancellor of the Exchequer, |
||
MP for Northampton |
|
|
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster |
||
|
- |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
|
Descent of George III into madness and the outset of the Regency era; his administration was notable for the lack of senior statesmen (Perceval also served as the Chancellor of the Exchequer); Peninsular War, part of the Napoleonic Wars. †The only Prime Minister to have been assassinated. |
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Robert Banks Jenkinson, |
8 June |
9 April |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Tory |
Liverpool |
2nd Earl ofLiverpool |
1812 |
1827 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1770-1828) |
1812, 1818, 1820, 1826 |
|
|||
|
Oversaw the United Kingdom's victory in the Napoleonic Wars; the Congress of Vienna; an economic recession in 1817; the Luddite movement; The War of 1812 (in Britain, the American War of 1812 to 1815); Peterloo Massacre in 1819; return to the gold standard in 1819; victory over the Marathas in the Third Anglo-Maratha War in 1819; the Cato Street Conspiracy to assassinate Liverpool in 1820. |
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Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
George Canning |
10 April |
8 August |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Tory (Canningite) |
Canning |
(1770-1827) |
1827 |
1827† |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
(Canningite-Whig) |
|
MP for Seaford |
- |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|
||
|
†Died shortly after taking office. |
||||
Frederick John Robinson, |
31 August |
21-Jan |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Tory (Canningite) |
Goderich |
1st ViscountGoderich |
1827 |
1828 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
(Canningite-Whig) |
|
(1782-1859) |
- |
|
|
||
|
Lacked support amongst colleagues; resigned. |
||||
Arthur Wellesley, |
22 January |
16-Nov |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Tory |
Wellington |
1st Duke ofWellington |
1828 |
1830 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1769-1852) |
1830 |
|
|||
|
First Irish Prime Minister; Catholic Emancipation Bill (over which he fought a duel). |
||||
Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
Charles Grey, |
22-Nov |
9 July |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Grey |
2nd Earl Grey |
1830 |
1834 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1764-1845) |
1831, 1832 |
|
|||
|
Reform Act 1832; quelled Swing Riots; restriction of employment of children; reform of the Poor Laws; abolition of slavery throughout the British Empire. |
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William Lamb, |
16 July |
14-Nov |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Melbourne I |
2nd ViscountMelbourne |
1834 |
1834 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1779-1848) |
- |
|
|||
|
William IV's opposition forced him to resign. |
||||
Arthur Wellesley, |
14-Nov |
10-Dec |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Tory |
Wellington Caretaker |
1st Duke ofWellington |
1834 |
1834 |
Secretary of State for the Home Department, |
||
(1769-1852) |
|
|
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, |
||
|
|
|
Secretary of State for War and the Colonies |
||
|
- |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
|||
|
Caretaker government while Sir Robert Peel was located and returned to London. Held many of the major posts himself. |
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Sir Robert Peel |
10-Dec |
8 April |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Conservative |
Peel I |
(1788-1850) |
1834 |
1835 |
Chancellor of the Exchequer |
||
MP for Tamworth |
1835§ |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
|
§Minority government. Unable to form a majority in Parliament so resigned. |
||||
William Lamb, |
18 April |
30 August |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Melbourne II; |
2nd ViscountMelbourne |
1835 |
1841 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
Melbourne III |
|
(1779-1848) |
1835, 1837 |
|
|
||
|
A father figure to Queen Victoria; Municipal Corporations Act 1835; Bedchamber Crisis; Treaty of Waitangi. |
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Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
Sir Robert Peel |
30-Aug |
29 June |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Peel II |
(1788-1850) |
1841 |
1846 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Tamworth |
1841 |
|
|||
|
Mines Act 1842; reintroduction of income tax; Factory Act 1844; Railway Regulation Act 1844; repeal of the Corn Laws (triggered by the Great Irish Potato Famine) and other tariffs;Maynooth Grant. |
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Lord John Russell |
30 June |
21 February |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Russell I |
(1792-1878) |
1846 |
1852 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for City of London |
1847§ |
|
|||
|
§Minority government, but with the Conservatives split between Protectionists and Peelites, the Whigs held power. Education Act 1847; Don Pacifico affair; Chartist demonstrations;Australian Colonies Government Act; The Great Exhibition; improved the Poor laws; the John Russell Ministry was ended by a vote of "no confidence" on a militia bill. |
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Edward Smith-Stanley, |
23 February |
17-Dec |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Derby I |
14th Earl ofDerby |
1852 |
1852 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1799-1869) |
1852 |
|
|||
|
Government collapsed when his Chancellor's Budget was defeated. |
||||
George Hamilton-Gordon, |
19-Dec |
30 January |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Peelite |
Aberdeen |
4th Earl ofAberdeen |
1852 |
1855 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
(Peelite-Whig) |
|
(1784-1860) |
- |
|
|
||
|
Led the country into the Crimean War; resigned after defeat in the vote for an inquiry into the conduct of the war. |
||||
Henry John Temple, |
6 February |
19 February |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Whig |
Palmerston I |
3rd ViscountPalmerston |
1855 |
1858 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
(1784-1865) |
1857 |
|
|||
MP for Tiverton |
Responded to the Indian mutiny of 1857; introduced the India Bill. |
||||
Edward Smith-Stanley, |
20 February |
11 June |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Derby II |
14th Earl ofDerby |
1858 |
1859 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1799-1869) |
- |
|
|||
|
Government of India Act 1858, transferring ownership of the East India Company to the Crown; Jews Relief Act, allowing Jews to become MPs. |
||||
Henry John Temple, |
12 June |
18 October |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Liberal |
Palmerston II |
3rd ViscountPalmerston |
1859 |
1865† |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
(1784-1865) |
1859, 1865 |
|
|||
MP for Tiverton |
Between periods in office he founded the Liberal Party; term dominated by policy concerning the American Civil War; attempts to alleviate suffering caused by the Lancashire Cotton Famine. †Died in office. |
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John Russell, |
29 October |
26 June |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Liberal |
Russell II |
1st Earl Russell |
1865 |
1866 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1792-1878) |
- |
|
|||
|
Attempted to introduce a further Reform Bill, but was opposed by his Cabinet. |
||||
Edward Smith-Stanley, |
28 June |
25 February |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Derby III |
14th Earl ofDerby |
1866 |
1868 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1799-1869) |
- |
|
|||
|
Reform Act 1867; considered by some to be the father of the modern Conservative Party. |
||||
Benjamin Disraeli |
27 February |
01-Dec |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Disraeli I |
(1804-1881) |
1868 |
1868 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Buckinghamshire |
- |
|
|||
|
Only ethnically Jewish Prime Minister; dissolved Parliament as the Conservatives did not have a majority. |
||||
William EwartGladstone |
03-Dec |
17 February |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Liberal |
Gladstone I |
(1809-1898) |
1868 |
1874 |
Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Greenwich |
1868 |
& Chancellor of the Exchequer (1873-74) |
|||
|
Introduced reforms to the British Army, Civil Service and local government; made peacetime flogging illegal; Irish Church Act 1869; Irish Land Act 1870; Education Act 1870; Trade Union Act 1871; Ballot Act 1872; Licensing Act 1872; failed to prevent the Franco-Prussian War. |
||||
Benjamin Disraeli |
20 February |
21 April |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Conservative |
Disraeli II |
(1804-1881) |
1874 |
1880 |
Leader of the House of Commons (1874-76), |
||
MP for Buckinghamshire until 1876 |
|
|
Lord Privy Seal (1876-78) |
||
Earl of Beaconsfield from 1876 |
1874 |
& Leader of the House of Lords (1876-80) |
|||
|
Various social reforms including the Climbing Boys Act 1875, the Public Health Act 1875 and the Artisans' and Labourers' Dwellings Improvement Act 1875; purchase of shares in theSuez Canal Company; Congress of Berlin; reintroduction of Queen Victoria to public life, including bestowing the title Empress of India; Second Anglo-Afghan War; breaking up of theLeague of the Three Emperors; the Zulu War; start of Long Depression. |
||||
William EwartGladstone |
23 April |
9 June |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Liberal |
Gladstone II |
(1809-1898) |
1880 |
1885 |
Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Midlothian |
1880 |
& Chancellor of the Exchequer (1880-82) |
|||
|
First Boer War; Irish Coercion Act; Kilmainham Treaty; Phoenix Park Murders; Married Women's Property Act 1882; Corrupt and Illegal Practices Prevention Act 1883; Reform Act 1884,Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 (sometimes known collectively as the Third Reform Act); failure to rescue General Gordon in Khartoum, Sudan. |
||||
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, |
23 June |
28 January |
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs |
Conservative |
Salisbury I |
3rd Marquess ofSalisbury |
1885 |
1886 |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
||
(1830-1903) |
1885§ |
|
|||
|
§Minority government. Legislation providing for housing the working class. |
||||
William EwartGladstone |
1 February |
20 July |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Liberal |
Gladstone III |
(1809-1898) |
1886 |
1886 |
Lord Privy Seal |
||
MP for Midlothian |
1885 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
|
First introduction of the Home Rule Bill for Ireland, which split the Liberal Party, resulting in the end of Gladstone's government. |
||||
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, |
25 July |
11-Aug |
Leader of the House of Lords, |
Conservative |
Salisbury II |
3rd Marquess ofSalisbury |
1886 |
1892 |
First Lord of the Treasury (1886-87) |
||
(1830-1903) |
1886 |
& Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (1887-92) |
|||
|
Opposed Irish home rule; repeal of final Contagious Diseases Act; Local Government Act 1888; Partition of Africa; Prevention of Cruelty to, and Protection of, Children Act 1889; Free Education Act 1891; creation of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe); New Unionism and London Dock Strike of 1889. |
||||
William EwartGladstone |
15-Aug |
2 March |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Liberal |
Gladstone IV |
(1809-1898) |
1892 |
1894 |
Lord Privy Seal |
||
MP for Midlothian |
1892§ |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
|||
|
§Minority government. Reintroduction of the Home Rule Bill, which was passed by the House of Commons but rejected by the House of Lords leading to his resignation. |
||||
Archibald Primrose, |
5 March |
22 June |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Liberal |
Rosebery |
5th Earl ofRosebery |
1894 |
1895 |
Lord President of the Council |
||
(1847-1929) |
- |
& Leader of the House of Lords |
|||
|
Imperialist; plans for expanding the Royal Navy caused disagreement within the Liberal Party; resigned following a vote of censure over military supplies. |
||||
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, |
25 June |
11 July |
Leader of the House of Lords, |
Conservative |
Salisbury III |
3rd Marquess ofSalisbury |
1895 |
1902 |
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (1895-1900) |
(Cons.-Lib.U.) |
|
(1830-1903) |
1895, 1900 |
& Lord Privy Seal (1900-02) |
|
||
|
Workmen's Compensation Act 1897; Anglo-Zanzibar War; Second Boer War and Khaki election; Anglo-Japanese Alliance. Last Prime Minister to serve entirely from the House of Lords |
||||
Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
Arthur Balfour |
11 July |
05-Dec |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Balfour |
(1848-1930) |
1902 |
1905 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
(Cons.-Lib.U.) |
|
MP for Manchester East |
- |
|
|
||
|
Had poor relations with Edward VII; his cabinet was split over free trade; establishment of the Committee of Imperial Defence; Entente Cordiale; Education Act 1902; Taff Vale case. |
||||
Sir HenryCampbell-Bannerman |
05-Dec |
7 April |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Liberal |
Campbell-Bannerman |
(1836-1908) |
1905 |
1908 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Stirling Burghs |
1906 |
|
|||
|
Restored autonomy to Transvaal and the Orange Free State; Anglo-Russian Entente; first Prime Minister to be referred to as such in Parliamentary legislation. |
||||
Herbert HenryAsquith |
7 April |
25 May |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Liberal |
Asquith I |
(1852-1928) |
1908 |
1915 |
Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for East Fife |
25 May |
07-Dec |
& Secretary of State for War (1914) |
Asquith II |
|
|
1915 |
1916 |
|
(Lib.-Cons.-Lab.) |
|
|
Jan.1910§, Dec.1910§ |
|
|
||
|
§Hung Parliaments. Liberal Welfare Reforms; People's Budget; Old Age Pensions Act 1908 and National Insurance Act 1911; Parliament Act 1911; Suffragettes and the Cat and Mouse Act; Home Rule Act 1914; World War I; Easter Rising. |
||||
Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
David Lloyd George |
07-Dec |
19 October |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Liberal |
Lloyd George |
(1863-1945) |
1916 |
1922 |
(Lib.-Cons.-Lab.) |
||
MP for Caernarvon Boroughs |
1918 |
|
|||
|
Welsh-speaking: only Prime Minister whose mother tongue was not English. End of World War I; Paris Peace Conference; attempted to extend conscription to Ireland during the First World War; Chanak Crisis. |
||||
Andrew BonarLaw |
23 October |
20 May |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Bonar Law |
(1858-1923) |
1922 |
1923 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Glasgow Central |
1922 |
|
|||
|
Canadian-born: only Prime Minister born outside the British Isles. Became Prime Minister following Conservative backbenchers' decision at the Carlton Club meeting to withdraw from the Lloyd George Coalition. Resigned due to ill health; died six months after leaving office. |
||||
Stanley Baldwin |
23 May |
16-Jan |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Conservative |
Baldwin I |
(1867-1947) |
1923 |
1924 |
Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Bewdley |
- |
& Chancellor of the Exchequer (1923) |
|||
|
Called a general election to gain a mandate for protectionist tariffs but failed to gain a majority; resigned after losing a vote of confidence. |
||||
Ramsay MacDonald |
22-Jan |
04-Nov |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Labour |
MacDonald I |
(1866-1937) |
1924 |
1924 |
Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Aberavon |
1923§ |
& Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs |
|||
|
§Hung Parliament; minority government reliant on Liberal support. First Labour Prime Minister; did not have a majority so could not introduce radical legislation; settled reparations with Germany following World War I; Zinoviev letter. |
||||
Stanley Baldwin |
04-Nov |
5 June |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Baldwin II |
(1867-1947) |
1924 |
1929 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Bewdley |
1924 |
|
|||
|
Treaty of Locarno; signatory of the Kellogg-Briand Pact; Pensions Act; enfranchisement of women over 21; UK General Strike of 1926. |
||||
Ramsay MacDonald |
5 June |
24 August |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Labour |
MacDonald II |
(1866-1937) |
1929 |
1931 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
||
MP for Seaham |
1929§ |
|
|||
|
§Hung Parliament. Appointed the first female minister, Margaret Bondfield; economic crises following the Wall Street Crash of 1929. |
||||
|
24 August |
7 June |
First Lord of the Treasury |
National Labour |
1st National; |
|
1931 |
1935 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
2nd National |
|
|
|
|
|
(Lab.Nat.-Cons.-Lib.Nat. |
|
|
1931 |
|
-Lib. until 1932) |
||
|
The Labour Government split on measures to resolve a budget crisis; MacDonald resigned, but was reappointed at the head of a National Government with the support of the Conservative and Liberal parties. He was subsequently expelled from the Labour Party; the National Government fought and won the election on the basis of a 'Doctor's Mandate'.Ottawa Conference supports protectionism, after which the free trade Ministers (Liberal and Viscount Snowden) resign. |
||||
Stanley Baldwin |
7 June |
28 May |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
3rd National |
(1867-1947) |
1935 |
1937 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
(Cons.-Lab.Nat.-Lib.Nat.) |
|
MP for Bewdley |
1935 |
|
|
||
|
Edward VIII abdication crisis; started rearmament but later criticised for failing to rearm more when Adolf Hitler broke Germany's Treaty of Versailles obligations. |
||||
Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
NevilleChamberlain |
28 May |
03-Sep |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
4th National |
(1869-1940) |
1937 |
1939 |
& Leader of the House of Commons |
(Cons.-Lab.Nat.-Lib.Nat.) |
|
MP for Birmingham Edgbaston |
03-Sep |
10 May |
|
Chamberlain War |
|
|
1939 |
1940 |
|
(Cons.-Lab.Nat.-Lib.Nat.) |
|
|
- |
|
|
||
|
Attempted to maintain "peace for our time" through appeasement of Germany, settling the Munich Agreement; widely criticised following the German Invasion of Poland and consequent outbreak of World War II; resigned after failing to form a Coalition Government. |
||||
Winston Churchill |
10 May |
23 May |
First Lord of the Treasury, |
Conservative |
Churchill War |
(1874-1965) |
1940 |
1945 |
Minister of Defence |
(All parties) |
|
MP for Epping |
23 May |
26 July |
& Leader of the House of Commons (1940-42) |
Churchill Caretaker |
|
|
1945 |
1945 |
|
(Cons.-Lib.Nat.) |
|
|
- |
|
|
||
|
World War II; led a Coalition Government; foundation of the United Nations; proposed what would eventually lead to the European Union; Beveridge Report. Following the ending of his all-party coalition, Churchill formed a "caretaker" government out of Conservatives, Liberal Nationals and non-party figures. However after two months it was defeated in the 1945 general election. |
||||
Clement Attlee |
26 July |
26-Oct |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Labour |
Attlee |
(1883-1967) |
1945 |
1951 |
& Minister of Defence (1945-46) |
||
MP for Limehouse until 1950 |
1945, 1950 |
|
|||
MP for Walthamstow West from 1950 |
Initiated the post-war consensus; introduced nationalisation of utilities; foundation of the National Health Service; extended national insurance scheme; Independence of India and the end of the British role in Palestine; foundation of NATO; beginning of the Cold War; the Berlin Blockade and the resulting Berlin Airlift; the start of British involvement in the Korean War. |
||||
Sir WinstonChurchill |
26-Oct |
7 April |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Churchill III |
(1874-1965) |
1951 |
1955 |
& Minister of Defence (1951-52) |
||
MP for Woodford |
1951 |
|
|||
|
Domestic policy interrupted by foreign disputes (Korean War, Operation Ajax, Mau Mau Uprising, Malayan Emergency). |
||||
Name |
Term of office |
Other ministerial offices |
Political party |
Government |
|
(Birth-Death) |
- |
held while Prime Minister |
of PM |
||
Constituency/Title |
Electoral mandates |
|
|
||
Sir Anthony Eden |
7 April |
10 January |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Eden |
(1897-1977) |
1955 |
1957 |
|||
MP for Warwick and Leamington |
1955 |
||||
|
Egyptian nationalisation of the Suez Canal; which sparked the Suez Crisis. Resigned due to ill health. |
||||
HaroldMacmillan |
10 January |
19-Oct |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Macmillan |
(1894-1986) |
1957 |
1963 |
|||
MP for Bromley |
1959 |
||||
|
The UK applied to join the European Economic Community for the first time, the application split the Conservatives and was vetoed by Charles de Gaulle; acceptance of Keynesianism; Rent Act 1957; Wind of Change speech; Notting Hill race riots and New Commonwealth immigration; beginning of Beeching Axe; Night of the Long Knives; Cuban missile crisis; Profumo Affair. |
||||
Sir Alec Douglas-Home |
19-Oct |
16-Oct |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Douglas-Home |
(1903-1995) |
1963 |
1964 |
|||
14th Earl of Home until 1963 |
- |
||||
MP for Kinross and Western Perthshire from 1963 |
Was the Earl of Home when he became Prime Minister, and renounced his peerage on 23 October 1963 in order to stand for the House of Commons. |
||||
Harold Wilson |
16-Oct |
19 June |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Labour |
Wilson I |
(1916-1995) |
1964 |
1970 |
& Minister for the Civil Service (1968-70) |
||
MP for Huyton |
1964, 1966 |
|
|||
|
Social reforms, including legalisation of abortion, abolition of capital punishment and decriminalisation of homosexuality; Rhodesian U.D.I.; adopted, then abandoned, the National Plan for the economy; Devaluation of the pound; foundation of the Open University; disputes with trade unions over In Place of Strife and prices and incomes policy. |
||||
Edward Heath |
19 June |
4 March |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Heath |
(1916-2005) |
1970 |
1974 |
& Minister for the Civil Service |
||
MP for Bexley |
1970 |
|
|||
|
U-turned over intervention in industry; negotiated Britain's entry to the European Community; Violence due to Northern Ireland's "Troubles" peaked; the Sunningdale Agreement agreed;Three-Day Week; Misuse of Drugs Act 1971; called early election in backfiring attempt to confront striking miners. |
||||
Harold Wilson |
4 March |
5 April |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Labour |
Wilson II |
(1916-1995) |
1974 |
1976 |
& Minister for the Civil Service |
||
MP for Huyton |
Feb.1974§, Oct.1974 |
|
|||
|
§Hung parliament. Ended dispute with miners; Social Contract with trade unions over the economy; Health and Safety at Work Act; Renegotiated terms for EC membership, then 1975 referendum validated entry; North Sea oil; Cod War. |
||||
James Callaghan |
5 April |
4 May |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Labour |
Callaghan |
(1912-2005) |
1976 |
1979 |
& Minister for the Civil Service |
||
MP for Cardiff South East |
- |
|
|||
|
International Monetary Fund loan to support the pound; the Lib-Lab pact; enacted devolution to Scotland and Wales but referendums stopped them; breakdown of relations with trade unions and Winter of Discontent. |
||||
MargaretThatcher |
4 May |
28 November |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Thatcher |
(1925- ) |
1979 |
1990 |
& Minister for the Civil Service |
(I, II, III) |
|
MP for Finchley |
1979, 1983, 1987 |
|
|
||
|
First female Prime Minister of the UK. Falklands War; sold council housing to tenants (right to buy); miners' strike 1984-85; privatisation of many previously government-owned industries; decreased the power of trade unions; negotiation of the UK rebate towards the European Community budget; Brighton hotel bombing; Sino-British Joint Declaration; Anglo-Irish Agreement; Westland Affair; abolition of GLC; Section 28; the "Poll tax" and Poll Tax Riots; Lockerbie bombing; the end of the Cold War. |
||||
Sir John Major |
28 November |
2 May |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Major |
(1943- ) |
1990 |
1997 |
& Minister for the Civil Service |
||
MP for Huntingdon |
1992 |
|
|||
|
Early 1990s recession; Gulf War; ratification of the Maastricht Treaty and the Maastricht Rebels; forced exit from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism ("Black Wednesday"); theDowning Street Declaration (initiating the Northern Ireland peace process); Privatisation of British Rail; The National Lottery; Citizen's Charter; Sunday Shopping; "Back to Basics" campaign; Cones Hotline; Dangerous Dogs Act. |
||||
Tony Blair |
2 May |
27 June |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Labour |
Blair |
(1953- ) |
1997 |
2007 |
& Minister for the Civil Service |
||
MP for Sedgefield |
1997, 2001, 2005 |
|
|||
|
Hong Kong handover; Death of Diana, Princess of Wales; Independence for the Bank of England;Ecclestone tobacco controversy; Belfast Agreement; Human Rights Act; devolution toScotland and Wales; House of Lords Reform; Minimum wage introduced; 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia; Fuel protests; creation of Greater London Authority and Mayoralty of London; 2001 foot and mouth crisis; War in Afghanistan; Iraq War; top-up fees introduced for university tuition; Civil Partnership Act; All forms of Magic Mushroom Class A; All forms of Cannabis moved from Class B to C; Constitutional Reform Act; 2005 London bombings; Cash for Honours scandal; Identity Cards Act; introduced student fees. |
||||
Gordon Brown |
27 June |
11 May |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Labour |
Brown |
(1951- ) |
2007 |
2010 |
& Minister for the Civil Service |
||
MP for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath |
- |
|
|||
|
London car bombs prevented from detonating; Glasgow Airport attack; child benefit data misplaced; Donorgate; Northern Rock and other banks nationalised; Treaty of Lisbon ratified;10p Tax rate abolished; Financial crisis of 2007-2010; Cannabis moved back to Class B; Mephedrone, Naphyrone and other Cathinones placed in Class B after pressure from The Sun;Professor David Nutt sacked from the ACMD for actions surrounding lecture on 'Equasy'; Parliamentary expenses scandal; Release of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi; arrest of Damian Green;Chilcot Inquiry established. |
||||
David Cameron |
11 May |
Incumbent |
First Lord of the Treasury |
Conservative |
Cameron |
(1966-) |
2010 |
& Minister for the Civil Service |
(Cons-Lib.Dem.) |
||
MP for Witney |
2010 |
|
|
||
|
Hung parliament; leading a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats. Bloody Sunday apology; Spending and Strategic Defence reviews (budget cuts to public services with ensuing anti-austerity protests and strikes); 2010 student protests; Arab Spring; Military intervention in Libya (Operation Ellamy); Alternative Vote (AV) referendum; News International phone hacking scandal; Welfare Reform Act, Health and Social Care Act; 2011 riots; European Fiscal Union veto; Cash for access scandal; London 2012 Summer Olympics; Jimmy Savile sexual abuse scandal. |