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PERPETUAL PENSIONS.

AN ENGLISH ANACHRONISM. SOME OF THEM COMMUTED. (From Our Special Correspondent.) LONDON, March 20. In 1753 the Brit isli Parliament granted a pension of £2(10(1 a year to Admiral Sir Geop-e Rodney, as a reward for his ser.vi.es tn liis country in inflicting an overwhelming defeat on a French fleet in April. 1752. and another notable victory over a Spanish fleet off the West Indies. Ten years later this pension was made perpetual, and it has been paid ever since to the .uccessive holders of the title of Lord Rodney. It has been t >aid for a continuous period of 141 Tears, although the title has not passed directly through father and son from the famous admiral. The present Lord Rodney, who is the eighth baron, is 33 years of age, and succeeded hiß father fifteen years ago. He is a grandson of the nephew of the fifth Lord Rodney, who was a brother of the third baron, the latter being the grandson of the admiral. Not one of the seven Lord Bodneys who succeeded the admiral perved in the navy. The fifth baron was a clergyman, and the otheds served in the army. The present Lord Rodney, who formerly held a commission in the Royal Scots Greys, is a farmer in Canada. Ho owns a farm of over a, thousand acres at Fort Sasketchewan, Alberta. He has been drawing only half the pension of £2000, the other half being paid to his mother, the Dowager Lady Rodney, who is a sister of Lord Winbourne.. It was announced a few days ago that this perpetual pension has been commuted by a cash payment of £42,000, being at the somewhat generous rate of t\ventv-one years' purchase. Altogether the State has paid £324.000 to Admiral (sir George Rodney and his descendants. There are now only two perpetual pensions paid by the British Treasury. The chief one is £5000 a year, drawn by Earl Kelson, who is a grandson of the nephew of the brother of the great Lord Nelson of Trafalgar. The other is a pension of £360 a year, paid to Mr. Gosling, a member of whose family purchased in 1702 this uncommitted portion of a pension of £28. 0 a year granted to the Duke of Schomberg and his heirs, for the duke's services as one of the German ■mercenaries of William of Orange at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. The Nelson Title. There have been repeated protests in Parliament and in the Radical newspapers at the continuance of the pension of .£..000 a year paid to the successive holders of the title of Earl Nelson. The pension granted to the victor of Trafalgar was only £2000 a year, but after his death an act was passed through Parliament entitling his successors to £5000 a year in perpetuity. This generosity on the part of Parliament was not in accordance with Nelson's wishes. He had no legitimate child, and he had quarrelled .with his wife. He was passionately attached to the famous Lady Hamilton, who lived with him at his country home, Merton ' Abbey, and by whom he had a daughter, Horatia. On the night before the battle of Trafalgar he wrote a codicil to his will, in which he set forth the services Lady Hamilton had rendered to the State through her intimate friendship with the Queen of Naples, and he asked that iiis country should provide for her and her daughter Horatia. The Government of the day not only suppressed this codicil, on the ground that it would he politically injurious to the Queen of Naples, but they completely ignored it. Nothing was done for Lady Hamilton and her daughter, but a sum of £10,000 was granted in trust to each of Nelson's two sisters, and £10,000 to his brother, Rev. William Nelson. Subsequently the brother was created an earl, and a further grant of £90,000 was passed by Parliament to be spent in the purchase of a country estate, where he could maintain the dignity of the Nelson family. A perpetual pension of £5000 a year was also granted. The first earl died without issue, and the title and pension passed to his nephew, Thomas Bolton, the son of one of AdmiraJ Nelson's sisters. The present Earl Nelson is the grandson of this Thomas Nelson. For IIS years the British Treasury has been paying £5000 a year to successive Earl Nelsons who are only remotely related to the hero of Trafalgar. No More Now. In these days the British Parliament would not grant a perpetual pension to anyone, no matter what the nature of th_ services rendered to the countfy. At the conclusion of the war with Germany no pensions of any kind were granted, but substantial cash sums were granted to naval and military officers who had occupied posts of great responsibility. These grants totalled £595,000, the chief recipients being:— Admiral Earl Beatty £100,000 Field-Marshal Earl Hale 100,000 Admiral Viscount Jelllcoe 50,000 Field-Marshal Viscount French. 50,000 Field-Marshal Lord Allenby ... 50,000 Field-Marshal Lord l'lnmer.... 50.000 General Lord Rawlinson 30.000 General Lord Home 30,000 After the Boer War Field-Marshal Lord Roberts received a grant of £100,000, and Field-Marshal Lord Kitchener £..0,000. The latter also received £30,000 after the Sudan campaign. The Duke of Wellington was granted a pension of £2000 a year for two generations, after his first Peninsular campaign, and on the conclusion of the Peninsular War this pension was doubled. He was given £100,000 for the purchase of an estate, and he was given his peerage. After Waterloo the Government bought the country estate of Strath fieldsaye for him, at a cost of £263,000, and he received £60,000 as his share of prize money.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19240517.2.223.164

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LV, Issue 116, 17 May 1924, Page 15

Word Count
951

PERPETUAL PENSIONS. Auckland Star, Volume LV, Issue 116, 17 May 1924, Page 15

PERPETUAL PENSIONS. Auckland Star, Volume LV, Issue 116, 17 May 1924, Page 15