Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-q6k6v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-11T10:31:57.117Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

1919

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2016

Extract

Round the town in the morning and a walk with Daff and Bud in Mr. Mackenzie's deer park after lunch. Arrived home I find a telegram from Em saying that Harold considers it imperative I should be ‘on hand’ in London while Ll.G. is reconstructing his Ministry. Much to the disgust of the happy little Henley party I resolve to catch the 6.40. Gol says: ‘Why didn't you let Willet Ball win?’

Type
Other
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Herbert Stern (1851–1919): merchant banker; cr. Baron Michelham 1905; knighted 1912.

2 William George Tyrell (1866–1947): civil servant; attached to the British delegation to the Paris Peace Conference with the rank of Minister-Plenipotentiary; Ambassador to France 1928–1934; knighted 1913; cr. Baron Tyrrell 1929.

3 James Eric Drummond (1876–1951): civil servant; Secretary-General of the League of Nations 1919–1933; Ambassador to Italy 1933–1939; succ. as 7th Earl of Perth 1937.

4 Eustace Sutherland Campbell Percy (1887–1958): civil servant, politician and educationalist; Con. candidate Kingston upon Hull 1919; MP for Hastings 1921–1937; Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Education 1923; Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Health 1923–1924; President of the Board of Education 1924–1929; Minister without Portfolio 1935–1936; Rector of King's College, Newcastle 1937–1952; cr. Baron Percy of Newcastle 1953.

5 Étienne Clémentel (1864–1936): French Minister of Commerce 1915–1919.

6 Jacques Seydoux (1870–1929): diplomat.

7 Vance Criswell McCormick (1872–1946): chairman of the Democratic National Committee, 1916–1819; chairman of the American delegation to the Paris Peace Conference.

8 Silvio Benigno Crespi (1868–1944): Italian industrialist and politician; Minister of Food 1918–1919.

9 Bernard Mannes Baruch (1870–1965): financier and presidential adviser.

10 Bernardo Attolico (1880–1942): diplomat.

11 Hubert Llewellyn Smith (1864–1945): civil servant; Permanent Secretary of the Board of Trade (1907–1919); Chief Economic Adviser to the Government 1919–1927; knighted 1908.

12 Maynard Keynes, John(1883–1946): economist; resigned from the Treasury and published his highly criticalThe Economic Consequences of the Peace (London: Macmillan, 1919)Google Scholar; cr. Baron Keynes 1942.

13 George Price Webley Hope (1869–1959): naval officer; Deputy First Sea Lord 1918; knighted 1919.

14 Charles T. Hardy: naval officer; Assistant Director of the Admiralty Trade Division during the First World War.

15 William Sutherland (1880–1949): civil servant and politician; private secretary to Lloyd George 1915–1919; Coalition (then National) Lib. MP for Argyllshire 1918–1924; Lord of the Treasury 1920–1922; Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster 1922; knighted 1919.

16 1894–1972; reigned as Edward VIII from January to December 1936; abdicated and was created Duke of Windsor.

17 John William Alcock (1892–1919): aviator; knighted 1919; killed in an air crash.

18 Arthur Whitten Brown (1886–1948): aviator and engineer; knighted 1919.

19 Victoria Alexandra Alice Mary (1897–1965): the third child and only daughter of George V and Queen Mary; cr. Princess Royal 1932.

20 John Joseph Pershing (1860–1948): US Army officer; led the American Expeditionary Forces during the First World War.

21 David Beatty (1871–1936): naval officer; Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Fleet 1916–19; First Sea Lord 1919–27; knighted 1914; cr. Earl Beatty 1919.

22 Unidentified.

23 Thomas Keens (1870–1953): accountant; Luton Alderman; Lib. MP for Aylesbury 1923–1924.

24 Lindsay, David Alexander Edward, (1871–1940): Con. MP for Chorley 1895–1913; President of the Board of Agriculture 1916; Lord Privy Seal 1916–1919; Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster 1919–1921; First Commissioner of Works in 1921–1922 (and additionally Minister of Transport in 1922); succ. as 27th Earl of Crawford and 10th Earl of Balcarres 1913.

25 Charles Albert McCurdy (1870–1941): Lib. (then Coalition/Nat Lib) MP for Northampton 1906–1923; Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food Control 1919–1920; Minister of Food Control 1920–1921; Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury (Chief Whip): 1921–1922.

26 John Anthony Cecil Tilley (1869–1952): civil servant; ambassador to Japan 1926–1931; knighted 1919.

27 William Athelstane Meredith Goode (1877–1944): journalist and civil servant; British Director of Relief in Europe 1919–1920; knighted 1918.

28 Henri Jaspar (1870–1939): Belgian lawyer and politician; Minister of Economic Affairs 1918–1920; Prime Minister 1926–1931.

29 Louis Loucheur (1872–1931): French industrialist and politician; Minister of Industrial Reconstruction 1918–1920.

30 Faisal bin Hussein bin Ali al-Hashimi (1885–1933): a key figure in the wartime Arab Revolt against Ottoman rule; reigned as Feisal I of Iraq from 1921.

31 Gabriel Haddad Pasha (d. 1923): a Syrian who served in the British administration in Cairo and Jerusalem during the First World War and who later became Faisal's representative in London.

32 Henry Wickham Steed (1871–1956): editor of The Times 1919–1922.

33 Possibly Robert George Howe (d. 1981 at age 87): diplomat; Governor-General of the Sudan 1947–1955; knighted 1947.

34 Ernest Murray Pollock (1861–1936): called to the Bar 1885; KC 1905; Con. candidate for Spalding 1900 and 1906; MP for Warwick and Leamington 1910–1923; Solicitor General 1919–1922; Attorney General 1922; Master of the Rolls 1923–1935; knighted 1917; cr. baronet 1922; cr. Baron Hanbury 1926.

35 Eyre Alexander Barby Wichart Crowe (1864–1925): civil servant; Permanent Secretary to the Foreign Office 1920–1925; knighted 1911.

36 Francesco Saverio Vincenzo de Paola Nitti (1868–1953): Prime Minister of Italy 1919–1920.

37 Maggiorino Ferraris (1856–1929): Italian journalist and politician.

38 Gabriele d'Annunzio (1863–1938): Italian writer and military adventurer; in 1919–1920 he headed a short-lived independent state in the Italian-majority city of Fiume (today known as Rijeka, in Croatia).

39 Dante Ferraris (1868–1931), industrialist and politician.

40 George Halsey Perley (1857–1938): Canadian politician; High Commissioner in London 1917–1822; knighted 1915.

41 Frank Lyon Polk (1871–1943): lawyer and State Department official.

42 Aleksandar Stamboliyski (1879–1923): Prime Minister of Bulgaria 1919–1923, then ousted in a coup and killed.

43 Harry Osborne Mance (1875–1966): soldier and transport expert; transportation adviser to the British delegation at the Paris peace conference 1919; knighted 1929.

44 Nancy Witcher Astor, née Langhorne (1879–1964): m. Robert Gould Shaw (1871–1930), 1897 and divorced 1901; m. Waldorf Astor 1906. When he succeeded to his father's viscountcy in 1919; she succeeded him as Con. MP for Plymouth Sutton in 1919 and served until 1945.

45 Frederick Alexander Macquisten (1870–1940): solicitor; called to the Bar 1919; Scottish KC 1919; English KC 1932; Unionist candidate for Leith Burghs Dec. 1910, Leith Burghs 1912; MP Glasgow Springburn 1918–1922, Argyllshire 1924–1940.

46 Granville Charles Hastings Wheler (1872–1927): called to the Bar 1898; Unionist candidate Osgoldcross 1906, Colne Valley 1907; MP for Faversham 1910–1927; cr. baronet 1925.

47 Lewis Haslam (1856–1922): businessman and politician; Lib. MP Monmouth 1906–1918; Co. Lib. MP Newport (Monmouth) 1918–1922.

48 Auckland Campbell Geddes (1879–1954): businessman and politician; Unionist MP for Basingstoke 1917–1920; Minister of National Service 1917–1918; President of the Local Government Board 1918–1919; President of the Board of Trade 1919–1920; Ambassador to the USA 1920–1923; knighted 1917; cr. Baron Geddes 1942.

49 James O'Grady (1866–1934): trades unionist and politician; Lab. MP Leeds East 1906–1918, Leeds South-East 1918–1924; Governor of Tasmania 1924–1930; Governor of the Falkland Islands 1931–1933; knighted 1924.