KING GEORGE III (GREAT BRITAIN) - MILITARY APPOINTMENT SIGNED 08/24/1802 CO-SIGNED BY: THOMAS (2ND EARL OF CHICHESTER) PELHAM - HFSID 78497
Sale Price $1,360.00
Reg. $1,600.00
KING GEORGE III of the UNITED KINGDOM and THOMAS PELHAM
Signed 1802 document appointing a captain to the 54th West Norfolk
Regiment of Foot
Military appointment signed: "George R" as King of England
and "Pelham" as Home Secretary. 1 page, 15½x11½, with
two paper seals on left. "Our Court at Saint James's", June 26, 1801.
This document appoints "Our Trusty and Welbeloved Henry Murray Esqr." as a
Lieutenant in the 54th West Norfolk Regiment of Foot. KING GEORGE III of the
United Kingdom (1738-1820) was King of Great Britain and King of Ireland
until their union on January 1, 1802, after which was named the United Kingdom,
and furthermore was Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg (part of the Holy Roman Empire),
until his promotion as King of Hanover on October 12, 1814. He was the third
British monarch from the House of Hanover, but unlike his Hanoverian
predecessors, he was born in Britain, English was his first language, and he
never visited Hanover. George's long tenure as King spanned many military
conflicts in Europe and abroad in North America and India: early in his reign
Great Britain defeated France in the Seven Years' War which made Britain the
dominant European power in North America and India, although many of their
colonies were soon lost in the American Revolutionary War. Most notably, King
George III led the country against revolutionary and Napoleonic France in 1793,
concluding with Napoleon's defeat at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
However, George III earned his nickname "Mad King George" when later in his
life he suffered from recurrent and eventually permanent mental illness (now
believed to have been cause by the blood disease porphyria), and in 1810, after
a final relapse, a regency under his son Prince Regent George of Wales (future
King George IV) was established. His reputation as a King has never been
flattering, in the United States he is often viewed as a tyrant, and in Great
Britain he is often used as a scapegoat for the failure of imperialism, but
really King George was just a victim of circumstances and illness in an era when
the monarchy was continuing to lose political power. THOMAS PELHAM, 2nd Earl
of Chichester (1756-1826) served as Chief Secretary for Ireland in 1783,
later representing Carrick in the Irish House of Commons from 1783 to 1790, and
Clogher from 1795-1798. He was named Great Britain's Home Secretary in 1801
and held the position for two years before being appointed the Chancellor of
the Duchy of Lancaster before succeeding into his father's earldom in 1805.
Lastly he held the office of Postmaster General from 1807-1826. Lightly toned,
soiled, stained and creased. Random ink stains. Folded twice horizontally and
thrice vertically. Folds are toned. Otherwise in fine
condition.
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