Secretary of State (Ireland)
The principal secretary of state, or principal secretary of the council, was a government office in the Kingdom of Ireland. It was abolished in 1801 when Ireland became part of the United [Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland] under the Acts of Union 1800.
The post was created in May 1560 by the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex. Sussex created the role to help re-establish English governance in Ireland, as part of the wider Tudor conquest of Ireland. The role was modelled in part on the role of Secretary of State in England, and was intended to be distinct from the clerks of the Irish Privy Council or the Governor's Private Secretary. Whilst the nature of the role evolved other time, originally the holder was expected to:
- chair the Privy Council of Ireland
- engage in regular full correspondence with the crown
- directing clerks of the Privy Council of Ireland
- charging treasons and seditious libels
- ordering the Postmaster General of Ireland to open letters
- offering advice on matters of state to the chief governor of Ireland
List of secretaries
- by 1576: John Challoner
- 1581: Sir Geoffrey Fenton and another
- 1603: Sir Richard Cooke
- 1612: Sir Dudley Norton
- 1616: Francis Annesley, 1st Baron Mountnorris
- 1634: Philip Mainwaring
- 1661: Sir Paul Davys
- 1665: George Lane, 1st Viscount Lanesborough
- 1678: Sir John Davys
- 1690: Sir Robert Southwell
- 1702: Edward Southwell Sr.
- 1730: Edward Southwell Jr.
- 1744: William Lingent Esqr.
- 1755: Thomas Carter
- 1763: Philip Tisdall
- 1766: John Hely-Hutchinson
- 1796: Thomas Pelham
- * Baron Glentworth and Lord Castlereagh
- 1801: Charles Abbot