John Lambert, one of the major-generals appointed…
July 1657 CE
John Lambert, one of the major-generals appointed in August 1655 to command the militia in the ten districts into which it was proposed to divide England, and who were to be responsible for the maintenance of order and the administration of the law in their several districts, had taken a prominent part in the Committee of Council which drew up instructions to the administrative major-generals.
He was the organizer of the system of police which these officers were to control.
Samuel Gardiner conjectures that it was through divergence of opinion between the Protector and Lambert in connection with these "instructions" that the estrangement between the two men began.
At all events, although Lambert had himself at an earlier date requested Cromwell to take the royal dignity, when the proposal to declare Oliver king was started in parliament (February 1657) he had at once opposed it.
A hundred officers headed by Charles Fleetwood and Lambert had waited on the protector, and begged him to put a stop to the proceedings.
Lambert was not persuaded by Cromwell's arguments, and their complete estrangement, personal as well as political, followed.
On his refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the protector, Lambert is on July 13 deprived of his commissions, receiving instead a pension of two thousand pounds a year.
He retires from public life to Wimbledon.