Clerks Assistant to Under Secretaries 1822-41

Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 8, Foreign Office Officials 1782-1870. Originally published by University of London, London, 1979.

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Citation:

'Clerks Assistant to Under Secretaries 1822-41', in Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 8, Foreign Office Officials 1782-1870, ed. J M Collinge( London, 1979), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/office-holders/vol8/p46 [accessed 16 November 2024].

'Clerks Assistant to Under Secretaries 1822-41', in Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 8, Foreign Office Officials 1782-1870. Edited by J M Collinge( London, 1979), British History Online, accessed November 16, 2024, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/office-holders/vol8/p46.

"Clerks Assistant to Under Secretaries 1822-41". Office-Holders in Modern Britain: Volume 8, Foreign Office Officials 1782-1870. Ed. J M Collinge(London, 1979), , British History Online. Web. 16 November 2024. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/office-holders/vol8/p46.

Clerks Assistant to Under Secretaries 1822-41

On the reorganisation of the Foreign Office in 1822 annual allowances of £150 were made available to the two most junior Clerks on the establishment as 'Private Secretaries to the Under Secretaries'. (fn. 1) In 1831 Palmerston directed that, as their duties were of a public and not a private nature, they should henceforth be designated Clerks Assistant to the Under Secretaries. (fn. 2) The latter term has been used throughout these lists. The number of Clerks Assistant was increased to three in 1824 and to four in 1836. (fn. 3) After 1822 receipt of the allowance was not restricted to Junior Clerks. From 1824 until 1839 all Clerks Assistant were Second Class Clerks, who became effectively superintendents of the work in the Political Departments of the office. On his promotion to a senior clerkship in 1834, Lenox Conyngham surrendered both the allowance and the duties of a Clerk Assistant. On Staveley's promotion to a senior clerkship in 1839, however, he retained both his allowance and his duties. In 1841 the three other Clerks Assistant were promoted to the enlarged senior grade and became in name as well as in fact Superintendents of the Political Departments. It was then provided that the four Clerks Assistant should retain their allowances of £150 until their retirement, but that their maximum salaries as Senior Clerks should be restricted to £850 rather than £1,000. (fn. 4)

1822 28 March Staveley, T.
1822 28 March Parish, W.
1823 10 Oct. Bankhead, C.
1824 5 July Lenox Conyngham, G.
1825 5 Jan. Ward, T. L.
1831 5 July Mellish, R. C.
1834 5 July Ward, T. L. (fn. 5)
1836 26 April Hammond, E.

Footnotes

  • 1. Order in council 28 March 1822 (PC 2/204 p. 86). The two Clerks awarded the allowance in 1822 had probably performed the duties of the office before that date. Staveley had been awarded an allowance of one guinea a day, payable out of the contingent fund, during the absence of the Under Secretary, W. R. Hamilton, 14 April 1820-30 July 1821 (FO 366/1292, payments 27 July 1820, 20 Aug. 1821; FO 366/672 pp. 186, 212). Parish had been awarded an annual allowance of £150, payable out of the contingent fund, in 1820 for extra duties on confidential business (FO 366/672 pp. 205, 209).
  • 2. FO 366/673 p. 162.
  • 3. FO 366/672 p. 394; FO 366/673 p. 314.
  • 4. Order in council 21 Aug. 1841 (FO 366/542 ff. 75-80); FO 366/674 pp. 5-12.
  • 5. Reappointed.