Lord Stanhope, Pitt’s biographer in 1865, received a letter from George Arthur Crawford:
Among some family papers which have recently come into my possession are four letters written by Pitt to a near relation of mine. Mr William Meeke to whom they are addressed was an intimate friend of Pitt at Cambridge and their friendship continued to the end of Pitt’s life. When another early friend Lord Westmorland went to Ireland as lord lieutenant Mr Meeke accompanied him as a member of the household. He sat for some years in the Irish parliament and was afterwards appointed clerk of the parliaments which office he held till the Union. He sat for Penryn in the first Imperial Parliament but soon afterwards retired into private life.
Meeke, who sat for Callan in the Irish parliament was ‘supposed to be sent over here, by Mr Pitt, for the purpose of giving him accurate information of Irish affairs’.
At the Union, Meeke received an annuity of £2,208 in compensation for his clerkship but declined to resign his secretaryship to the board of general officers in Ireland and retained for life the mastership of the revels, worth £300 p.a.
You are rather high in your demand of an office of business; there are few so highly paid as that you wish for, and none but those to fill which men of experience are required. I think I shall soon have an opportunity of placing your friend, if he be more moderate than you are, which I hope he is, as the duke and I observe that you found your claim to this provision upon the fact that you refused to resign, and have kept an office which the government wished to give to another!
However, I will really do what I can for your friend.
In 1812 and 1813, Meeke was again interested in a seat in Parliament, as Lord Lonsdale’s nominee, but no opportunity arose and he was supposed to have lost interest.
