SHELBURNE, WILLIAM PETTY, EARL OF, son of the 1st earl, and ma ternal grandson of the famous Sir Will iam Petty; born in Dublin, May 20, 1737. After studying at Oxford and serving in Germany, he entered the House of Com mons for the borough of Wycombe in 1761, but only sat for a few weeks, the death of his father calling him to the House of Lords. When George Gren ville succeeded Bute in 1763 Lord Shel burne was placed at the head of the Board of Trade, and when Chatham formed his second administration in 1766 he became one of the Secretaries of State. On the fall of Lord North's ministry in 1782, George III. sent for Shelburne and pro posed to him to form a government. He declined. not being the head of a nartY.
and was sent by the king to the Marquis of Rockingham with an offer of the Treasury, himself to be one of the Sec retaries of State. It soon appeared that Shelburne was not so much the colleague as the rival of Lord Rockingham, the chosen minister of the court, and the head of a separate party in the cabinet.
On Rockingham's death in the follow ing July the king sent at once for Shel burne and offered him the Treasury, which he accepted without consulting his colleagues. Fox thereupon resigned, and
Shelburne introduced William Pitt, then only 23, into office as his Chancellor of the Exchequer. Shelburne's ministry, on the occasion of the king's announcement of his determination to concede the in dependence of the American colonies, found itself outvoted by the coalition be tween Fox and Lord North (February, 1783). He resigned, and the coalition ministry took his place, but soon broke up. The nation expected that the king on this event would have sent for Shel burne, but William Pitt received the prize, and Shelburne was consoled by being made in 1784 Marquis of Lansdowne. The rest of his days he spent in retire ment, amusing himself by collecting in Lansdowne House a splendid gallery of pictures and a fine library, and with the friendship of Priestley, Jeremy Bentham, Sir S. Romilly, Mirabeau, Dumont, and others. He died in Bowood Park, Wilt shire, May 7, 1805.