WILLIAM IV
1830 - 1837
William IV, 17651837,
king of Great Britain and Ireland (183037), third son of George
III. He went to sea in 1779, served under Admiral George Rodney in
action off Cape St. Vincent (1780), and by 1786 was a captain. William
became duke of Clarence in 1789 and was advanced by 1799 to the rank
of admiral, but he saw little active service after 1790. Meanwhile
in the House of Lords he opposed the antislavery movement and supported
the extravagances of his oldest brother (later George IV). About 1791
he formed a liaison with Mrs. Jordan, an actress, with whom he lived
for over 20 years. He married (1818) Adelaide, daughter of the duke
of Saxe-Meiningen, and on the death (1827) of the duke of York, second
son of George III, he became heir presumptive to the throne. Made
lord high admiral in 1827, he tried to run naval affairs without his
council, contrary to law, and was forced to resign (1828). In 1830
he succeeded George IV as king. His most important public act was
his promise, given most reluctantly, to the 2d Earl Grey that he would,
if necessary, create enough Whig peers to pass the Reform Bill of
1832 (see under Reform Acts). This bill and such reforms as the education
act, the new poor law, the municipal corporations act, and the abolition
of slavery in the empire marked his reign, but he maintained the generally
passive attitude toward politics formed during his many years as younger
son and later younger brother of the king. Political leadership was
left to the duke of Wellington, Earl Grey, Viscount Melbourne, and
Sir Robert Peel. Good-natured but eccentric and given to ill-considered
public utterances, William was only moderately popular. He was succeeded
by his niece,Victoria.
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