Sir Stafford Henry Northcote, 8th Baronet (born October 27, 1818, London, England—died January 12, 1887, London) was a British statesman and a leader of the Conservative Party who helped to shape national financial policy.
On leaving Balliol College, Oxford, he became in 1843 private secretary to William Gladstone at the Board of Trade. He was afterward legal secretary to the Board and, after acting as one of the secretaries to the Great Exhibition of 1851, cooperated with Sir Charles Trevelyan in framing the report that revolutionized the conditions of appointment to the civil service. He succeeded his grandfather as 8th baronet in 1851. He entered Parliament in 1855 and, steadily supporting his party, became president of the Board of Trade in 1866, secretary of state for India in 1867, and chancellor of the Exchequer in 1874. In the interval between these last two appointments he had been one of the commissioners for the settlement of the Alabama claims by the United States.
On Benjamin Disraeli’s elevation to the House of Lords in 1876, Northcote became leader of the Conservative Party in the Commons. As finance minister he was largely dominated by the policies laid down by Gladstone; but he distinguished himself by his dealings with the debt, especially his introduction of the new sinking fund (1876), by which he fixed the annual charge for the debt in such a way as to provide for a regular series of payments off the capital. His temper as leader was, however, too gentle to satisfy the more ardent spirits among his own followers, and party cabals (in which Lord Randolph Churchill took a leading part) led to Sir Stafford’s transfer to the Lords in 1885, when Salisbury became prime minister. Taking the titles of earl of Iddesleigh and Viscount St. Cyres, he was included in the cabinet as first lord of the Treasury.
In Lord Salisbury’s 1886 ministry Northcote became secretary of state for foreign affairs, but the arrangement was not a satisfactory one, and his resignation had just been decided upon when he died very suddenly at Salisbury’s official residence in Downing Street. Among Northcote’s works are Twenty Years of Financial Policy (1862), a valuable study of Gladstonian finance, and Lectures and Essays (1887).