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STANLEY, FREDERICK ARTHUR, 1st Baron STANLEY and 16th Earl of DERBY, governor general; b. 15 Jan.  in London, England, second son of Edward George Geoffrey Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, and Emma Caroline Wilbraham; m. there 31 May  Lady Constance Villiers, and they had eight sons and two daughters; d. 14 June  at Holwood, near Hayes, Kent, England.

Educated at Eton College, Frederick Arthur Stanley joined the Grenadier Guards in and retired in as a captain.

He was elected to the House of Commons that year for Preston, near the family estates in Lancashire, in the Conservative interest. After his famous father resigned as prime minister in February , and Benjamin Disraeli succeeded as leader of the party, Stanley got his first official appointment, as civil lord of the Admiralty.

In November he successfully contested the long-time Liberal seat of North Lancashire, which he represented until , when redistribution compelled him to change to Blackpool. He was raised to the peerage in his own right as Baron Stanley of Preston in 

Unlike his father, Stanley was no orator and was not comfortable in the House of Commons.

Lord stanley biography wikipedia Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby. Derby was a Freemason. Hurst and Blackett Limited. During his visit, he dedicated Stanley Park , which is named after him.

He had, however, considerable administrative ability and a good head for business, talents that Disraeli utilized when he appointed him financial secretary to the War Office. In April  Stanley was made secretary of state for war, in which office he continued the work of army reform begun by Edward Cardwell. His appointment was popular with the army and its commander-in-chief, the Duke of Cambridge.

At the defeat of the Conservatives in , he resigned office. In –86 he served as colonial secretary under Lord Salisbury.

On 1 Feb.  Salisbury offered him the governor generalship of Canada. Stanley accepted almost at once.

Lord stanley sf Outside politics, he was also known for his passion for sports, a tradition encouraged by his grandfather, who had founded the Oaks horse race. Thomas Grosvenor George Wilbraham. The Earl of Derby. That month, Parliament declared Edward V and his younger brother Richard, Duke of York the Princes in the Tower illegitimate on the grounds that their father Edward IV's marriage to Elizabeth Woodville was bigamous, by way of a prior pre-contract of marriage with Eleanor Butler.

He was gazetted on 1 May and was in Quebec a month later. He and his wife were delighted with the prospects from their official residences in Ottawa and Quebec. Lady Stanley wrote to her sister, “We are up to now very much pleased with our new homes & all the people both at Ottawa & Quebec are most cordial & charming to us.

F. [Frederick] has made a very great & good impression by his french.” Within a year or two the Stanleys had developed interests in both east and west. Stanley House, as it came to be called, was a “cottage,” a country house really, near New Richmond, Que., facing Baie des Chaleurs. Stanley bought it in the summer of Honoré Mercier*, premier of Quebec, stayed there that August and thanked the governor general for the use of it.

In September and October  the Stanleys went west on the Canadian Pacific Railway and were enthusiastic. “We are filled with wonder & admiration for the minds that conceived the idea of this wonderful railroad & of the energy & courage of those who carried it out,” Lady Stanley wrote 16 miles from Regina. During that trip Lord Stanley officially opened Stanley Park in Vancouver, named after him the year before and located on land given by the Canadian government to the city from a military reserve.

Governor General Lord Stanley had his problems with Canadian militia and defence.

He knew a good deal about the army, and sought to impress on Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald* the importance of a small but efficient militia, smaller even than what the dominion then had. You know, he informed Macdonald in , “it is openly said that the disposal of the money voted for the Militia is not always that for which it is voted, nor is it influenced only by considerations of the well being of the force.” Macdonald was quick to appreciate Stanley’s expertise; “You cannot speak too plainly to me,” he wrote back.

The state of the militia, Macdonald said, was partly the fault of its minister, Sir Adolphe-Philippe Caron, but was also owing to staff who were Grits and quite unfit on other grounds. Caron kept them on lest he be charged with political enmity.

Stanley was fastidious, circumspect, not to say timid, in dealing with the vagaries – the tracasseries – of Canadian politics.

In January , when Macdonald wanted to dissolve parliament over Edward Farrer*’s annexationist pamphlet, Stanley wrote him that he found little treasonable language in it. Then, like Pontius Pilate, he washed his hands. “Of course, however, you know best. I don’t venture to express an opinion one way or the other, as to the policy of using this unpublished paper as a weapon of political war.”

As Macdonald lay dying at the end of May , indecision by the governor general exacerbated the political crisis.

Stanley was sure that the prime minister had named his own successor, in his will or somewhere, and he refused to appoint a successor until after Macdonald’s funeral. Justice minister Sir John Sparrow David Thompson* was impatient, not for himself, but with the indecision that racked Ottawa before and after Macdonald’s death on 6 June.

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  • No nominal paper was found. Stanley preferred Thompson, but Thompson knew that Protestant Ontario would have a difficult time accepting a Roman Catholic prime minister. Stanley was not even sure the government would survive; he had surmised on 4 June that it might well go to pieces.

    Once the dust had settled and John Joseph Caldwell Abbott* had reluctantly agreed to serve as prime minister (from the Senate), it was clear that he and Thompson (leading in the House of Commons) were going to take hold of the Conservative party.

    They had Stanley’s blessing. There were difficulties, partly owing to Abbott’s reluctance to interfere with his cabinet colleagues, who kept pulling hard in different directions. As well, Canada was in the midst of a diplomatic wrangle with the Americans over the arrest of Canadian sealers in the Bering Sea. Two questions, the principle of access to the sea and the issue of damages, arose.

    The Canadians insisted the two had to be taken together, the British wanted them separated. Each had measured American intentions differently. Canada was, said Stanley, at the awkward stage when it could not stand alone, yet resented being led. In February  he explained to Colonial Secretary Lord Knutsford that in his dispatches he had to ask questions and make applications, on behalf of his Canadian ministers, that looked idiotic; he did not like to refuse his ministers even though the British government, he strongly suspected, might find it impossible to grant their requests.

    The imperial government also wanted Newfoundland joined with Canada, if that were possible without violating the feelings of Newfoundlanders and provided Canada would grant reasonable terms.

    In a letter to Colonial Secretary Lord Ripon in November , Stanley noted that there was a meeting in Halifax on the subject. He thought that Premier Sir William Vallance Whiteway of Newfoundland might want to make a display of negotiating in order to generate political capital from a Canadian refusal.

    But if Whiteway were serious, Stanley said, Sir John Thompson would deal with him judiciously.

    By this time Abbott was ill and had to give up the prime ministership. Thompson was now the only choice. On 23 November he met with Stanley and agreed to replace Abbott the following month. There was no longer the question of having to keep ministers in line: Thompson ran a tight ship, although he was away in Paris from March to June  for the Bering Sea arbitration.

    That was the point at which Stanley was forced to resign office, though his term was not to expire until September.

    Lord stanley biography for kids Chancellor of the University of Oxford — University of Toronto Press. In office 23 February — 17 December However, the real issues facing Parliament could not be postponed for long, and when Disraeli submitted his first budget to Parliament in December , it proved so unpopular with the Peelites, the Free Traders, and the Irish Brigade that it was voted down in a "no confidence" vote.

    His elder brother died childless on 21 April, and Stanley became the 16th Earl of Derby. There were pressing family reasons to return home. Leaving Canada in early July, he was now out of politics for good. He was grateful to Thompson for his great help “during the stormy times which during the past five years, we have successfully weathered together.” And he was praised by Ripon for his conduct of Canada during a difficult time.

    Stanley’s lasting gift to the nation was the large silver cup he donated in March  for the best team in Canadian amateur ice hockey.

    A number of his sons, notably Arthur, delighted in the game, and with the Nova Scotian law clerk of the Senate, James George Aylwin Creighton*, as moving spirit, a junior team was formed in with the improbable name of the Rideau Hall Rebels. In Arthur was a founder of the Ontario Hockey Association. Doubtless his sons’ interest helped prompt the sports-minded governor general – he had provided a trophy and medal for curling – to present a cup for hockey.

    The Dominion Challenge Trophy was first awarded in to the Montreal Amateur Athletic Association, which won the first contest for the trophy, against Ottawa, the following year. Eventually known as the Stanley Cup, it was won in by a professional team, the Ottawa Senators, and is the oldest trophy competed for by professional athletes in North America.

    Following his return to Britain, Derby served in –96 as first lord mayor of Liverpool; there is a statue of him there in St George’s Hall.

    Lord stanley tudor: The Earl of Derby. In the House of Lords, on 23 November , he accused the Irish Catholic clergy of using the confessional to encourage lawlessness and crime. Sir Richard Cross — Toggle the table of contents.

    He was subsequently lord lieutenant of Lancashire. As befitted such a role, he returned happily to his old love of horse-racing. King Edward VII was a regular visitor at Knowsley Park, Derby’s huge estate eight miles from Liverpool. Derby was elected president of the British Empire League in He died four years later at Holwood, his house in Kent, and was buried at Knowsley Park.

    Stanley was one of those quiet, careful proconsuls who are a credit to their class.

    Former prime minister Arthur James Balfour wrote to Lady Derby that her late husband had been one of his oldest and kindest friends, “a man who had a genius for inspiring affection among those who knew him.” With wide interests, kind, retiring, and transparently honest and sincere, he was not altogether fitted for the cut and thrust of political life.

    Since he lacked flamboyance, the impression he left is misleading. There was a great deal of knowledge and experience in Stanley, but it was deployed modestly and tentatively.

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  • Canadians remember him more for Stanley House, Stanley Park, and the Stanley Cup. He would not have minded that recollection, imperfect though it is.

    P. B. Waite

    The main collection of Lord Stanley’s papers is the Hobbs (Derby–Gathorne-Hardy) papers, in the library of Corpus Christi College, Univ. of Cambridge, Eng.

    An inventory of the collection is available at the Hist. mss Commission and National Reg. of Arch. (London), no The NA has microfilmed from it nearly all of the important letters relating to Stanley’s sojourn in Canada as governor general (MG 27, I, B7). The Stanley collection at the Liverpool Record Office (16th Earl of Derby corr.) deals primarily with his years in England, but includes two boxes concerning Canada.

    These contain mainly printed materials, including annual reports and government documents. There is also material concerning Stanley in the Thompson papers (NA, MG 26, D).

          Gazette (Montreal), – Ottawa Free Press, – Times (London), 1 June  World (Toronto), 28 Nov.  Burke’s genealogical and heraldic history of the peerage, baronetage and knightage, ed.

    Peter Townend (th ed., London, ). CPG, Debrett’s peerage, baronetage, knightage, and companionage . . . (London, ). Dan Diamond and Joseph Romain, The Hockey Hall of Fame; the official history of the game and its greatest stars (Toronto, ).

    DNB. H. H. Roxborough, The Stanley Cup story (Toronto, []).

    Lord stanley biography These, and his closeness to successive royal families — whom he could count amongst his kith and kin by several different connections — made him a figure of great power and influence. Edward Smith-Stanley navigational boxes. Further reading [ edit ]. Southport Visitor.

    Types of Canadian women (Morgan): Waite, Man from Halifax. S. F. Wise and Douglas Fisher, Canada’s sporting heroes (Don Mills [Toronto], ).

    General Bibliography

    © – University of Toronto/Université Laval

    Cite This Article

    P. B. Waite, “STANLEY, FREDERICK ARTHUR, 1st Baron STANLEY and 16th Earl of DERBY,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol.

    13, University of Toronto/Université Laval, –, accessed January 18, ,

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    Author of Article:   P. B. Waite
    Title of Article:   STANLEY, FREDERICK ARTHUR, 1st Baron STANLEY and 16th Earl of DERBY
    Publication Name:  Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol.

    13

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    Access Date:  January 18,