Charles James Fox

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Charles James Fox’

1
Honourable Mr Fox Samuel Smiles

The colourful Foreign Secretary humbly accepted a lesson in manners from a local tradesman.

Charles James Fox (1749-1806) was a larger-than-life statesman in the time of King George III. He supported the revolutionaries of France and America, frequently changed political sides, kept a mistress (whom he secretly married in 1795), gambled to excess, and campaigned against slavery – a maddening blend of rascal and man of honour.

Read

2
Douglass’s Debt Frederick Douglass

British statesmen were among those who inspired the career of one of America’s greatest men, Frederick Douglass.

At thirteen, escaped slave Frederick Douglass bought a schoolbook, ‘The Columbian Orator’, for fifty cents. It nurtured gifts of understanding and eloquence that brought Douglass to prominence as America’s leading anti-slavery campaigner, and among his favourite passages were speeches by great British statesmen of his day.

Read

3
Heads I Win, Tails You Lose! Charles H. Ross

(That’s cat-tails, obviously.) And who ever said cats were unpredictable?

Charles Fox was a Whig politician who served briefly as Foreign Secretary. A staunch opponent of King George III, he once dressed himself in the colours of the American revolutionary army. But he was also friends with Prince George, the King’s son.

Read