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Sir James Robert George Graham

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GRAHAM, SIR JAMES ROBERT GEORGE, an English statesman; born in Netherby, Cumberland, England, June 1, 1792. He was educated at West minster and Queen's College, Cambridge. As private secretary to the British min ister in Sicily in 1813, he had a hand in the negotiations with Murat at Naples. After his return for Carlisle as a Whig in 1826 he became a warm supporter of Catholic emancipation and a zealous ad vocate of the Reform Bill. Earl Grey thereupon offered him, in 1830, the post of First Lord of the Admiralty, with a seat in the cabinet. But in 1834 he se ceded from the government, disagreeing with his colleagues on the appropriation clause of the Irish Church Temporalities Act; and, going over to the Conserva tives, became in 1841 Home Secretary under Sir Robert Peel. In 1844 he is sued a warrant for opening the letters of Mazzini, and caused the information thus obtained to be communicated to the Austrian minister, an act by which the ministry, and Graham in particular, in curred great obloquy. He also encoun

tered great displeasure N. of the Tweed by his high-handed method of dealing with the Scottish Church during the troubles which ended in the Disruption and the formation of the Free Church. He gave Peel warm support in carrying the Corn Law Repeal Bill, and resigned office (1846) with his chief as soon as that measure was carried. On the death of Peel in 1850 he became leader of the Peelite party in the Lower House, and in December, 1852, took office in the Coalition Ministry as First Lord of the Admiralty. He retired from official life in February, 1855, and died in Netherby, Oct. 26, 1861.