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The animal in question is a cat given the grandiose title of 'The Chief Mouser of the Cabinet Office' and their job is to ensure that the treasury or, in later years, 10 and 11 Downing Street, are kept free from rodents. The first of government cats was employed during the reign of Henry VIII but few records about the chief mouser's office - not even the names of the appointees - survive until 1924 when A.E. Banham authorised the use of 1d a day for the maintenance of an efficient cat leading to an official position being created in the civil service, which would later become known by its current title.
The first cat was the humorously named 'Treasury Bill' (because his position was created by a treasury bill... (do you see what they did there?) who served in the government of Ramsey McDonald and chancellor Philip Snowdon. Unfortunately for Bill he was a pretty poor excuse for a rat-catcher and was spotted by one minister wandering around the halls of Downing Street looking emaciated and begging for food. The minister reported this to Snowdon, who was in charge of the nation's purse strings, but Snowdon did nothing, perhaps believing that if left hungry Bill would buck up his ideas and become a better mouser. Then one day Bill gained entry to Snowdon's office and proceeded to mew at him and rub himself against the chancellor's ankles. This melted the notoriously tight chancellor's heart and within days he had secured a pay-rise for Bill.
As Bill was not the best of mousers by 1929 he was joined by Peter, who became a legend in the civil service. Peter held the position until his death in 1946, although by the mid- to late-30s he was effectively retired but still living in Downing Street and helping out his younger colleges with rat-catching duties whenever he saw fit. The first of Peter's younger colleagues to arrive was Munich Mouser who only served for a few years before his death in 1943. Also present was Winston Churchill's cat, Nelson. Nelson assumed full duties as the mouser, despite being a personal pet rather than officially on the civil-service payroll, until he left Downing street with Churchill. The next incumbent was named Peter II after the recently deceased Peter, but was in the post for less than a year before he died while on duty in 1946 after being hit by a car.
Peter II was replaced with Peter III who, like Peter, had a long and successful appointment to the post, serving from 1946 through to 1964 without major incident. In a great leap forward for sexual equality the next Chief Mouser was Peta, the first female appointee to the post. Peta served until 1976 but took semi-retirement in 1970 when she entered into a job-share with the new appointee, Wilberforce.
Wilberforce was the first of several mousers the media took a great interest in and many stories were told about him. One oft told by the nefarious Margaret Thatcher is that she herself had brought Wilberforce to Downing Street after “rescuing” him from a life under the yoke of communism having tempted him off the streets in Moscow using some sardines from a local supermarket. This, like a lot of things she said, is almost certainly a lie as she was the 4th prime minister Wilberforce served under.
The next cat, Humphrey, who would become the most famous of all the mousers, was appointed to the position in 1989. Humprey's tale is one of rags to riches: he started off as a stray cat who frequented the area and would often be observed catching mice in around the grounds of Downing Street and St James' Park. In 1989 he was adopted by the cabinet office and took to his new pampered life well. Humphrey took a wage of £100 a year, which was contributed towards his food, and was much better value to the tax payer than the £4000 paid annually to human pest controllers who reportedly failed to catch any rodents one year as Humphrey was doing such a good job. It seemed tragedy had struck in June 1995 as Humphrey went missing and in September the government announced his apparent death to a tearful nation. Thankfully it turned out that that he had just been adopted by the nearby Royal Army Medical College, who had taken him in thinking he was a stray and named him Patrol Cat. Upon his return to Downing Street “he” issued a statement: “I have had a wonderful holiday at the Royal Army Medical College, but it is nice to be back and I am looking forward to the new parliamentary session.”
Humphrey was not without his detractors, however: he was blamed for savaging a duck in St James' park and for the death of some robins in a window box
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In January, during a live broadcast from Number 10 a rat was seen scurrying past the door. A hilarious visual metaphor but a potential problem for the P.M.'s P.R. department. After first trying to pour cold water on reports that there would soon be a new Chief Mouser, a van from the Battersea Dog and Cats' home arrived outside the Cabinet Office. The van, of course, contained the new appointee to the post: a formerly stray tabby cat called Larry. The Cabinet Office has yet to confirm whether, like previous appointees, Larry will be part funded by tax payers.
1 comment:
Larry as my deepest sympathy because he has such a very difficult or even impossible task ahead of him.
He may have a reasonably easy time attending to the extermination of the long tailed, four legged vermin (commonly called rats) in that place. But it will be so much more difficult for him to rid the place of the fork-tongued, two legged vermin (commonly called politicians) who are in residence or visit the place.
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