Henry Pelham

Thomas Pelham Holles

Thomas Pelham-Holles, Duke of Newcastle, was a British Whig politician and two-time Prime Minister. He dominated mid-18th-century politics through patronage, elections and party management.

Born
1693 CE
Died
1768 CE
Role
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom

British Prime Minister (1693–1768)

Portrait of the Duke of Newcastle in formal Georgian attire
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Profile details

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Full name
Thomas Pelham Holles, Duke of Newcastle
Also known as
Duke of Newcastle, Newcastle Whig leader
Facts

Thomas Pelham Holles timeline facts

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1693
Aristocratic inheritance

Thomas Pelham-Holles was born in 1693 into a wealthy Whig family, inheriting titles, estates and a political network that shaped his career.

1724
Secretary of State

As Secretary of State from 1724, Newcastle handled diplomacy and domestic management while Robert Walpole dominated financial and Commons leadership.

1750s
War pressures

The Seven Years' War exposed Newcastle's weaknesses, but his alliance with William Pitt turned patronage and public leadership into a winning combination.

1768
Enduring reputation

Newcastle died in 1768 with a reputation for fussiness and indecision, but also as one of the great political organisers of Georgian Britain.

Life Journey

Patronage, Whig management, and the politics of survival

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1693

Aristocratic inheritance

Thomas Pelham-Holles was born in 1693 into a wealthy Whig family, inheriting titles, estates and a political network that shaped his career.

1710s

Entry into politics

Newcastle entered politics as a committed Whig and Hanoverian loyalist, building influence during the early eighteenth-century party settlement.

1720s

Building influence

He became one of Britain's great managers of elections and appointments, turning patronage into a durable political machine.

1724

Secretary of State

As Secretary of State from 1724, Newcastle handled diplomacy and domestic management while Robert Walpole dominated financial and Commons leadership.

1730s–1740s

Whig dominance

With his brother Henry Pelham, Newcastle helped sustain Whig dominance after Walpole, balancing court, Commons and aristocratic factions.

1754

Prime minister

Newcastle became prime minister in 1754 after Henry Pelham's death, but office exposed the limits of a leader built for management rather than command.

1750s

War pressures

The Seven Years' War exposed Newcastle's weaknesses, but his alliance with William Pitt turned patronage and public leadership into a winning combination.

1760s

Gradual withdrawal

After George III's accession, Newcastle's influence declined as the court sought to loosen old Whig control and reshape government.

1768

Enduring reputation

Newcastle died in 1768 with a reputation for fussiness and indecision, but also as one of the great political organisers of Georgian Britain.

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British Prime Ministers lineage
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British Prime Ministers
1721 CE–present

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

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Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Thomas Pelham Holles,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Thomas Pelham Holles,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Thomas Pelham Holles,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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