John_Adrian_Louis_Hope,_1st_Marquess_of_Linlithgow John_Adrian_Louis_Hope,_1st_Marquess_of_Linlithgow

John Adrian Louis Hope, 1st Marquess of Linlithgow - Definition and Overview

Lord Linlithgow
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Lord Linlithgow

John Adrian Louis Hope, 1st Marquess of Linlithgow, 7th Earl of Hopetoun (25 September 1860 - 29 February 1908), first Governor-General of Australia, was born at Queensferry, Linlithgowshire, Scotland, on 25 September 1860, the eldest son of the sixth Earl of Hopetoun. He was educated at Eton College and the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, but did not join the army on graduation. Instead he managed the family estates and pursued a life of leisure. He served as a Lord in Waiting from June 1885 to January 1886 and August 1886 to August 1889. During his time in Australia he was known as Lord Hopetoun.

In 1889 he was appointed Governor of Victoria, where he served until 1895. His popularity in Victoria and his friendship with leading Australian politicians made him a logical choice to be the first Governor-General, and he was appointed in July 1900, arriving in Sydney in December, shortly before the inauguration of the Commonwealth of Australia on 1 January 1901.

Hopetoun's first task was to appoint a Prime Minister. Since no federal elections had yet been held, he could not follow the usual convention of appointing the leader of the majority party in the House of Representatives. So he offered the post to Sir William Lyne, the Premier of the largest state, New South Wales.

This decision was defensible in terms of protocol, but it ignored the fact that Lyne had opposed federation and was unpopular with the leading federalist politicians. Alfred Deakin and other prominent politicians told Hopetoun they would not serve under Lyne. Eventually Lyne returned his commission and Hopetoun sent for Edmund Barton, the leader of the federal movement and the man everybody believed was entitled to the post. Hopetoun was widely criticised for this "blunder".

Statue of the Marquess of Linlithgow, Linlithgow Avenue, Melbourne
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Statue of the Marquess of Linlithgow, Linlithgow Avenue, Melbourne

Further problems soon arose. Hopetoun had brought his own official secretary, William Wallington, who handled all his communications with London. The Australians resented an Englishman being in charge of official business. They also resented the regal pomp with which Hopetoun insisted in carrying out his role, and the expense which this entailed. He also had an unfortunate tendency to speak as though he was co-ruler of Australia beside the Prime Minister, which was not the situation the Constitution envisaged.

Finally a dispute arose over the allowance to be paid to the Governor-General to enable him to maintain vice-regal residences in both Sydney, the largest city, and Melbourne, the temporary capital. Rivalries between New South Wales and Victoria led to both the Commonwealth and Victorian parliaments rejecting bills to pay Hopetoun an additional allowance. As a result Hopetoun abruptly resigned in May 1902.

Hopetoun left Australia in July, acutely aware that he had failed in a historic role. In compensation he was created Marquess of Linlithgow, but failed to be appointed to the position he most wanted, Viceroy of India. He was Secretary for Scotland in 1905, and died suddenly on 29 February 1908. He is little remembered in Australia, although there is a fine equestrian statue of him on Linlithgow Avenue in Melbourne.


Preceded by:
Sir Henry Loch
Governor of Victoria
1889–1895
Succeeded by:
The Lord Brassey
Preceded by:
Charles Seale Hayne
Paymaster-General
Succeeded by:
The Duke of Marlborough
Preceded by:
The Earl of Lathom
Lord Chamberlain
1898–1900
Succeeded by:
The Earl of Clarendon
Preceded by:
Governor-General of Australia
1901–1903
Succeeded by:
The Lord Tennyson
Preceded by:
Alexander Murray
Secretary for Scotland
1905
Succeeded by:
John Sinclair



Preceded by:
New Creation
Marquess of Linlithgow
Succeeded by:
Victor Hope
Preceded by:
John Alexander Hope
Earl of Hopetoun


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