The Rt. Hon. William Windham III MP (1750-1810) (after John Hoppner)
William Say (Norwich 1768 – London 1834)
Category
Art / Prints
Date
1790 - 1834
Materials
Paper
Measurements
380 x 298 mm
Order this imageCollection
Felbrigg, Norfolk
NT 1396305
Summary
A print, a mezzotint, of The Rt. Hon. William Windham III MP (1750-1810) (after John Hoppner) by William Say (Norwich 1768 – London 1834). He is shown half-length, turned to his left. He was the son of William Windham II and Sarah Hicks and married Cecilia Forrest. He was a Whig politician who rose to being Secretary of War under Pitt (1794-1801) and again in Grenville's ministry (1806-7), when he was associated with the reform of conditions in the Navy. According to the article in the Dictionary of National Biography, he was 'pious, chivalrous and disinterested, and his brilliant social qualities made him one of the first gentlemen as well as one of the soundest sportsmen of his time'. The article refers to his diary, published in 1866, as showing him to have been vacillating and hypochrondriacal in private, but excuses the political inconsistency which led to his being nicknamed 'Weathercock Windham'. He was a good orator, and became the leader of his party in the Commons, so was much offended to be offered a peerage after Fox's death: "They want ordanance, and yet would begin by spiking one of their greatest guns!" (Earl of Ilchester, The Home of the Hollands, 1937, pp.241-42).
Provenance
Part of the Windham Collection. The hall and contents were bequeathed to the National Trust in 1969 by Robert Wyndham Ketton-Cremer (1906-1969)
Marks and inscriptions
On the reverse: 'Freeman, carver and gilders, looking-glass manufacturer and printseller, No.2 London Lane, Norwich'.
Makers and roles
William Say (Norwich 1768 – London 1834), engraver (printmaker) after John Hoppner, RA (London 1758 – London 1810), artist