Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The Disaster
- 2 The Village
- 3 The Coalfield
- 4 The Industry
- 5 The Colliery
- 6 The Aftermath
- 7 Sir Stafford Cripps
- 8 The Working Mine
- 9 The Inquiry
- 10 The Management
- 11 The Firemen
- 12 The Inspectorate
- 13 The Miners
- 14 The Union
- 15 The Reports
- 16 The Last Rites
- Epilogue
- Appendix A Nationalisation
- Appendix B The Davy Lamp
- Appendix C Butties
- Appendix D Owners
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - Sir Stafford Cripps
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 The Disaster
- 2 The Village
- 3 The Coalfield
- 4 The Industry
- 5 The Colliery
- 6 The Aftermath
- 7 Sir Stafford Cripps
- 8 The Working Mine
- 9 The Inquiry
- 10 The Management
- 11 The Firemen
- 12 The Inspectorate
- 13 The Miners
- 14 The Union
- 15 The Reports
- 16 The Last Rites
- Epilogue
- Appendix A Nationalisation
- Appendix B The Davy Lamp
- Appendix C Butties
- Appendix D Owners
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Richard Stafford Cripps was born in 1889 into a solidly upper-middle-class family. His father, later given a peerage by Asquith, was a lawyer, his mother one of the famous Potter sisters, themselves the daughters of a prosperous Manchester merchant. Another of the sisters, Beatrice, married to Sydney Webb, provided a link with politics, but until Cripps's father accepted office in Mac-Donald's first Labour Government the environment which Cripps himself knew best was comfortably and undemandingly conservative. The deepest shadow on an otherwise happy childhood was the death of his mother when he was five years old.
Sent to Winchester, he proved a brilliant scholar with an unexpected aptitude for chemistry, and won the first scholarship ever offered in the subject at New College, Oxford. His examination papers were so outstanding that they were sent to Sir William Ramsey at University College, London, with the result that Cripps was invited to study and work with him. At 22, being already the inventor of a device for measuring the density of liquids and gases, he became the youngest student ever to read a paper, of which he was co-author, before the Royal Society.
This, however, was not the prelude to a scientific career. Following his father's example he read for the Bar, passed his finals in 1912, and was called to the Middle Temple in 1913.
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- Chapter
- Information
- GresfordThe Anatomy of a Disaster, pp. 61 - 74Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 1999