On this day … 22 June 1809

The end of an inquiry into a sex scandal involving an earlier Duke of York was marked with a grand dinner at the Bull Inn (now the Bull and Royal), in honour of the two Preston MPs, Lord Stanley, and Samuel Horrocks, for the part they played in the inquiry. One hundred and twenty gentlemen joined them at the dinner.

The information on the dinner comes from Peter Whittle’s History of Preston. He does not say how the two MPs voted, but given that those hostile to the duke included Radicals and Radical-leaning Whigs, then certainly Horrocks and almost certainly Lord Stanley would have backed the duke.

Whittle does not explain why their participation in the inquiry, surely simply part of their parliamentary duties, should have earned them such a sumptuous banquet.

The duke, the king’s second son and commander of the British army, had been accused of involvement with his former mistress, Mrs Mary Anne Clarke, in selling commissions in the army. The House of Commons inquiry in which the two Preston MPs were involved was followed by calls for the duke’s dismissal from his army post. The Government backed the duke, and found him innocent of the charge, but there was such a large number of MPs who disagreed that the duke was forced to resign.

Mrs Clarke, mistress of Frederick, Duke of York
National Portrait Gallery: Mary Anne Clarke (née Thompson) (1776-1852), Mistress of the Duke of York. Painted by Adam Buck, 1803 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mary_Anne_Clarke_(n%C3%A9e_Thompson).jpg

The inquiry provoked so much anger that there was soon a host of MPs attacking corruption in high places. It fired up enthusiasm for reform among the more radical members of the House of Commons.

It was Mrs Clarke herself who had lifted the lid on the affair. She was miffed that the duke had stopped paying her the pension he had given her from the civil list to buy her silence when he ended their adulterous affair. She admitted that she had been running a business selling army commissions, at a time when her lavish lifestyle was being funded by generous contributions from the duke.

The duke was already unpopular as military commander because of the humiliating defeats inflicted on the British army in Spain. It was his poor performance that makes him the most likely candidate for the Grand Old Duke of York featured in the song, although there are other candidates, other dukes of York having scandalised the public.

The inquiry into the affair took up twelve days of parliamentary time, with the public ever eager to learn the latest revelations. Those seeking the duke’s dismissal, inside and outside the House of Commons, were a rather unsavoury grouping, and the whole affair smacked of a conspiracy.

One of the MPs attacking the duke in parliament was Lord Folkestone, who, according to the History of Parliament’s account of the affair, ‘soon found his way into Mrs. Clarke’s bed’.

Mrs Clarke did very well out of her role in the affair. The government paid her £10,000 (roughly £500,000 in today’s money) and gave her a pension of £400 a year for the duke’s letters to her and the destruction of the memoir she had written about her time as the duke’s mistress.

She later admitted that she had launched the attack on the duke simply to make money, and alleged that it was part of a conspiracy by another royal son, the duke of Kent, to discredit his brother.


Sources
Peter Whittle’s History of Preston
History of Parliament: https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/periods/hanoverians/duke-york-scandal-1809

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