William Pitt and family

William Pitt the Elder, Earl of Chatham, was twice Prime Minister and was buried in the north transept of Westminster Abbey on 9th June 1778. His was a magnificent public funeral. A stone, only measuring one foot square, was placed over the burial vault with just his initials on it (in the centre part of the transept and adjoining the Wilberforce grave). Later a slightly larger stone was laid down which included his name and dates and those of his son William. Only a small part of this inscription can now be made out.

His large monument of white marble, by sculptor John Bacon, is nearly 33 feet high and cost £6,000. At the base sits Britannia holding her trident, and below her are the reclining figures of Ocean (Neptune) with a dolphin and the female figure of Earth, with a globe, fruit and flowers. Above, on a sarcophagus, sit the figures of Prudence and Fortitude. At the very top, in a niche, is the standing figure of Chatham delivering an oration with arm outstretched. His arm points towards the site of the grave. The inscription reads:

ERECTED BY THE KING AND PARLIAMENT AS A TESTIMONY TO THE VIRTUES AND ABILITY OF WILLIAM PITT, EARL OF CHATHAM; DURING WHOSE ADMINISTRATION IN THE REIGNS OF GEORGE THE SECOND AND GEORGE THE THIRD DIVINE PROVIDENCE EXALTED GREAT BRITAIN TO AN HEIGHT OF PROSPERITY AND GLORY UNKNOWN TO ANY FORMER AGE. BORN 15 NOVEMBER 1708. DIED 11 MAY 1778.

William was born in 1708 the younger son of Robert Pitt of Cornwall and Harriet, daughter of the Hon. Edward Villiers of Ireland. He was educated at Eton and Cambridge and entered Parliament in 1735. Although he suffered from gout and ill health he was known as a great orator in Parliament. He pressed for peace with America in 1777, which he declared could not be conquered, but his request for the recall of British troops was unsuccessful.

In 1754 he married Hester, daughter of Richard Grenville. She was buried with him on 16th April 1803 aged 83. Their son John (born 1756) succeeded as 2nd Earl of Chatham and served in the army, becoming Lord Privy Seal and governor at various times of Plymouth, Jersey and Gibraltar. His wife Mary Elizabeth Townshend, a daughter of Thomas, 1st Viscount Sydney, was buried in the vault on 30th May 1821 aged 59. As they had no children the title became extinct. John was buried on 3rd October 1835. Another son James (1761-1781) died while serving in the navy. Their daughters were Hester, who married Lord Mahon, and Harriet who married the Honourable Edward Eliot at St Margaret's Westminster on 4th September 1785. Lady Harriet was buried with her father on 2nd October 1786.

William's lifelike wax effigy, wearing Parliamentary robes and wig, is in the Abbey collection. It was made in 1775 by American sculptor Patience Wright.

William Pitt the Younger

William Pitt the Younger (born 1759) became Britain's youngest Prime Minister at age 24. He was buried with his father on 22nd February 1806. The funeral was a more low-key occasion than that for Nelson a few weeks earlier. He was unmarried and died of exhaustion through overwork, leaving many debts. His body lay in state for two days in the Palace of Westminster. The procession left Westminster Hall at 12:30pm and entered the west door of the Abbey with trumpets playing and the choirs of the Abbey, the Chapels Royal and St Paul's singing.

His monument by Sir Richard Westmacott, which cost £6,300, stands over the west entrance door (as there was not room for it near his father in the north transept):

THIS MONUMENT IS ERECTED BY PARLIAMENT, TO WILLIAM PITT, SON OF WILLIAM, EARL OF CHATHAM, IN TESTIMONY OF GRATITUDE FOR THE EMINENT PUBLIC SERVICES, AND OF REGRET FOR THE IRREPARABLE LOSS OF THAT GREAT AND DISINTERESTED MINISTER. HE DIED ON THE 23 JANUARY 1806, IN THE 47th YEAR OF HIS AGE.

He stands in a similar pose to his father and at his feet sit the figure of a woman representing History writing his words in a book and a youth in chains representing Anarchy (a reference to the French Revolution).

The wax effigy is on display in the new Queen's Diamond Jubilee Galleries in the Abbey triforium.

Further reading

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 for William Pitt the Elder, William Pitt the YoungerHester Pitt and John Pitt

"Pitt the Elder" by Jeremy Black, 1992

"William Pitt the Younger" by William Hague, 2005

"Patience Wright. American artist and spy in George III's London" by Charles Coleman Sellers, 1976

British royal and state funerals, music and ceremonial... by M. Range 2016

Accounts of the funerals are at the College of Arms in London.

History of Parliament online

Pitt the Elder also has a monument at the Guildhall in London.

Occupation

Statesman

Location

Nave; North Transept; Triforium

Memorial Type

Grave; statue

Material Type

Marble

William Pitt and family
William Pitt the Elder monument

This image can be purchased from Westminster Abbey Library

Image © 2024 Dean and Chapter of Westminster

William Pitt and family
Pitt the Elder statue

This image can be purchased from Westminster Abbey Library

Image © 2024 Dean and Chapter of Westminster

William Pitt and family
Pitt the Younger monument

This image can be purchased from Westminster Abbey Library

Image © 2024 Dean and Chapter of Westminster

William Pitt and family
William Pitt wax effigy

This image can be purchased from Westminster Abbey Library

Image © 2024 Dean and Chapter of Westminster