Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T02:12:53.108Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

“Our Execrable Banditti”: Perceptions of Nabobs in Mid-Eighteenth Century Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2014

Get access

Extract

In March 1761 the diarist Horace Walpole complained that “West Indians, conquerors, nabobs, and admirals” were attacking every parliamentary borough in the general election. Although it lacked statistical proof, this sour observation became an accepted tenet in political histories of Britain written during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Even the one full-length study of nabobs published in 1926 echoes Walpole's refrain; Holzman depicted them as a group of nouveaux riches “determined to raise their power and position to the level of their credit. This precipitated a fierce class strife, which was signalised [sic.] by changes in the ownership of landed estates and pocket boroughs.” The investigations of the Namierite school have long since demolished the myth of an East Indian onslaught on English politics and society in the mid-eighteenth century. Only a handful of novice MPs were returned to parliament in the general elections of 1761 and 1768, and those elected did not constitute a concentrated and coherent East Indian lobby at Westminster.

Yet should Walpole's observation be dismissed so readily? This was an age of ignorance of the nature of the British presence in India, of considerable misgivings over the many effects that an empire of conquest in the east would have on Britain, and of a resultant lack of enthusiasm for an Asian empire. The leading historian of the British connection with India in the eighteenth century has recently pointed out that this reluctance derived in part from fears that it would upset not only the social and political, but also the moral underpinnings of established society.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference on British Studies 1984

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Letters of Horace Walpole, Fourth Earl of Orford, ed. Mrs.Toynbee, P., 16 vols. (Oxford, 1905), 5:29Google Scholar. Nabob is a corruption of the Persian nawab, a regional govenor under the Mughal empire. By the mid eighteenth century the Indian nawabs had secured independence from the central authority in Delhi and founded dynastic states. Contemporaries used the term nabob to refer either to nawabs or to the Company's servants.

2 Holzman, J.M., The Nabobs in England 1760-1785: A Study of the Returned Anglo-Indian, (New York, 1926), p. 15.Google Scholar

3 The standard account of the Company in politics, although one that devotes little attention to parliament, is Sutherland, L.S., The East India Company in Eighteenth Century Politics (Oxford, 1952)Google Scholar. For the elections of 1761 and 1768 see Namier, L.B. and Brooke, J., eds., The House of Commons 1754-1790, 3 vols. (London, 1964), 1:149–46Google Scholar; Namier, L.B., The Structure of Politics and the Accession of George III (2nd ed.; London, 1961), pp. 158–72Google Scholar: Namier, L.B., England in the Age of the American Revolution (2nd ed.; London, 1961), pp. 125–70Google Scholar: Phillips, C.H., “Clive in the English Political World, 1761-64,” Bulletin of the School or Oriental and African Studies, 12 (19471948): 695702.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 Marshall, P. J., “A Free though Conquering People”: Britain and Asia in the Eighteenth Century, Published lecture, (London, 1981).Google Scholar

5 See Christie, I.R., Wilkes, Wyvill and Reform (London, 1962).Google Scholar

6 See Furber, H., John Company at Work, (Cambridge, Mass., 1948)CrossRefGoogle Scholar and Marshall, P.J., East Indian Fortunes: The British in Bengal in the Eighteenth Century, (Oxford, 1976).Google Scholar

7 For Pitt see Dalton, N.C., The Life of Thomas Pitt, Governor of Madras, (Cambridge, 1915)Google Scholar. For Yale see Steiner, B., “Two New England Rulers of Madras”, South Atlantic Quarterly 1 (1902): 209–23Google Scholar, and Bingham, H., Elihu Yale: The American Nabob of Queen Square, (New York, 1939).Google Scholar

8 Journal of Colonel James Renell, 1762, India Office Library and Records (hereafter cited as IOR), Home Misc. Series, 765, p. 132.

9 Manners, V. and Williamson, G.C., John Zoffany, R.A. His Life and Works 1735-1810 (London and New York, 1920), p. 80Google Scholar. A lac (lakh) denotes 100,000.

10 Public Advertiser, 29 Aug. and 16 Sept. 1776.Google Scholar

11 This estimate includes all returned Anglo-Indians, not only those directly employed in the civil or military service of the Company. It assumes a substantial, if not massive, fortune garnered in India. Compiled from the authors' biographical notes and from Holzman, The Nabobs in England; Marshall, East Indian Fortunes; Sutherland, The East India Company; Gurney, J.D., “The Debts of the Nawab of Arcot, 1763-1776”, D. Phil. Thesis, Oxford University, 1967Google Scholar; Phillips, C.H., The East India Company 1784-1834 (Manchester, 1961)Google Scholar; J. Phillips, “The Development of British Authority in Southern India; The Nawab of Arcot, the East India Company, and the British Government, 1775-1785”, Ph.D. diss. Dalhousie University, 1983.

12 For a discussion of nabob ambitions, which demonstrates that most were content with the life of a petty country gentleman, see Marshall, , East Indian Fortunes, pp. 214–19.Google Scholar

13 Phillips, “The Development of British Authority”, passim, esp. chs. 5 and 9.

14 Holzman, , The Nabobs in England, p. 135Google Scholar; Gurney, , “Debts of the Nawab of Arcot”, p. 82Google Scholar. A pagoda was a southern Indian gold coin worth about 8 shillings.

15 Namier, and Brooke, , The House of Commons, 3: 279–81.Google Scholar

16 This issue is discussed more fully in Lawson, P. and Lenman, B., “Robert Clive, the ‘black jagir’, and British politics,” Historical Journal 26 (1983): 801–30.Google Scholar

17 The careers of Stratton, Rumbold and Benfield are discussed in Gurney, “The Debts of the Nawab of Arcot” and Phillips, “The Develoment of British Authority.”

18 Lawson and Lenman, “Robert Clive.” Clive's jagir was a pension of £30,000 per annum from the Bengal land revenues.

19 Namier, and Brooke, , The House of Commons, 3: 245 and 449–51.Google Scholar

20 See Philips, , The East India Company, pp. 3642.Google Scholar

21 IOR, Orme MS., 39, 5.

22 Hill, G., History of English Dress from the Saxon Period to the Present Day, (New York, 1893), p. 142.Google Scholar

23 London Courant, 28 Feb. 1781.

24 The play was first performed at Drury Lane in December 1781. See Hogan, C.B., The London Stage 1660-1800, vols. (Carbondale, Ill., 1968) 5: 452Google Scholaret seq.

25 Public Advertiser, 11 Sept. 1777.

26 Quoted in Love, H.D., Vestiges of Old Madras, 3 vols. (London, 1913), 3: 149 nGoogle Scholar. Mackreth was once a waiter at White's who married the proprietor's daughter and became owner of the club and MP for Castle Rising. Rumbold remitted part of his Indian fortune to him.

27 Memoirs of Samuel Foote Esq: With a Collection of his genuine Bon-Mots. Anecdotes, Opinions…, ed. Cooke, W., 3 vols. (London, 1805) 3: 180Google Scholar. For a fuller discussion of Foote's popular appeal see Brewer, J., “Theatre and Counter Theatre in Georgian Politics: the Mock Elections of Garrat,” Radical History Review 22 (19791980): 740.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

28 These quotations from The Nabob are taken from The Dramatic Works of Samuel Foote, Esq.; To which is prefixed a Life of the Author, 2 vols. (London, 1809) 2: 4850Google Scholar

29 Additional Grenvitle Papers, 1765-1767, ed. Tomlinson, J.R.G. (Manchester, 1962), pp. 9699.Google Scholar

30 See Lawson, P., “Parliament and the First East India Inquiry 1767,” Parliamentary History Yearbook 1 (1983): 99114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

31 These are ably discussed in Thomas, J.P., “Imperial Issues in the British Press, 1760-1782,” D. Phil. Thesis, Oxford University, 1982, ch. 5.Google Scholar

32 See, for example, Holwell, J.Z., Interesting Historical Events relative to the History of Bengal (London, 1765).Google Scholar

33 Walpole Letters, 5:30 (18 Mar. 1764).Google Scholar

34 Recollections and Reflections, Personal and Political, as connected with Public Affairs during the Reign of George III, 2 vols. (London, 18191820), 2: 244–50.Google Scholar

35 Namier, and Brooke, , The House of Commons, 1: 398.Google Scholar

36 Public Advertiser, 20 Feb. 1776.

37 Works of Samuel Foote, 2: 3740.Google Scholar

38 Sir Henry Cavendish's Debates of the House of Commons during the Thirteenth Parliament of Great Britain, 2 vols. (London, 18411843), 1: 61.Google Scholar

39 Public Advertiser, 28 Oct. 1774.

40 Ibid., 22 July 1782.

41 See C. Gullett to N. Wraxall, 26 June 1782, and A. Hamilton to P. Benfield, 22 Jan. 1783, IOR, MS. Eur. C. 307/5, ff. 20 and 40.

42 In 1779 Smith became High Sheriff of Berkshire. He apparently convened a county meeting to arrange for a road to be built through the property of those present, “for his sole convenience, so that he might arrive at Chiltern Lodge, without the necessity of passing through the little stinking town of Hungerford.” Quoted in Holzman, , The Nabobs in England, p. 25.Google Scholar

43 Works of Samuel Foote, 2: 33-34.

44 Charles Lloyd to George Grenville, 1 June 1769, B.L. Add. MS. 57818, f. 170.

45 George Johnstone to James Oswald, 3 March 1764, Oswald MS., Chest 4, C. Hockworthy House, Devon. We are indebted to Mrs. D.C. Bruton for permission to quote from this collection.

46 See Speck, W.A., Stability and Strife: England, 1714-1760 (Cambridge, Mass., 1977), pp. 153–6.Google Scholar

47 Public Advertiser, 26 May, 1773.

48 Ibid., 17 Nov. 1777.

49 Ibid., 15 Aug. 1776.

50 Burke, Edmund, “Speech on the Nabob of Arcot's Debts”, in The Writings and Speeches of Edmund Burke. Volume V India: Madras and Bengal 1774-1785, ed. Marshall, P.J. (Oxford, 1981) p. 629.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

51 For Burke's views on India see Ibid.; Marshall, P.J., The Impeachment of Warren Hastings, (London, 1965)Google Scholar; O'Gorman, F., Edmund Burke: His Political Philosophy, (London, 1973).Google Scholar

52 Book 4, “The Winter Evening” (1785).

53 Works of Samuel Foote, 2: 55.Google Scholar

54 The Whitefoord Papers, ed. Hewins, W.S., (Oxford, 1898), p. 169.Google Scholar

55 London Chronicle, 15-18 April 1775.

56 Walpole Letters, 8: 157 (9 April 1772).Google Scholar

57 The Correspondence of William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, eds. Taylor, W.S. and Pringle, J.H., 4 vols. (London, 18381840) 3: 405.Google Scholar

58 London Chronicle, 31 Dec. 1774 - 3 Jan. 1775.

59 Marshall, A Free Though Conquering People.

60 Public Advertiser, 30 Aug. 1781.

61 Ibid., 27 Dec. 1776.

62 Thomas Mercer to Lord Macartney, 20 June 1783, Macartney MS., Deccan College, Poona, d. 906.

63 Public Advertiser, 20 Dec. 1776 (authors' emphasis).