Attlee, Clement, 1st Earl Attlee
A Dictionary of British History
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2004
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© A Dictionary of British History 2004, originally published by Oxford University Press 2004. (Hide copyright information)
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Attlee, Clement, 1st Earl Attlee (1883–1967). Prime minister. The son of a solicitor, Attlee grew up in a comfortably middle‐class environment. He was educated at Haileybury and University College, Oxford. Called to the bar in 1905, he forsook the law for a career in social work after viewing poverty at first hand in London's East End. Meanwhile Attlee became committed to socialism, joining the
Fabians in 1907 and the
Independent Labour Party in 1908. He volunteered for military service in the
First World War, fighting with distinction in Gallipoli, Mesopotamia, and France. In later years he retained the title of ‘Major’, setting himself apart from the strong anti‐militarist strain within the Labour movement.
With the war over Attlee became mayor of Stepney and was elected to Parliament as member for Limehouse in 1922. He immediately became parliamentary private secretary to Ramsay
MacDonald and was appointed under‐secretary at the War Office in the short‐lived Labour government of 1924. He became chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster in November 1930, but was soon promoted to be postmaster‐general. When this second Labour government collapsed in the summer of 1931, Attlee refused to follow Mac Donald when the latter re‐emerged as prime minister of an all‐party
National Government.
Ironically, Labour's catastrophic performance in the general election of that year worked to Attlee's advantage. So depleted was the party's front bench that Attlee faced no opposition when the pacifist George
Lansbury was forced out of the leadership in 1935. Even so, it was widely expected that Attlee would be only a stop‐gap leader. After the general election of 1935, however, he retained his position in a contest with Herbert
Morrison and Arthur Greenwood.
It was always easy to underestimate his qualities. He was no orator. Even his private conversation was clipped and uninformative. But Attlee emerged as a consummate politician, capable of controlling difficult and wilful colleagues. During the 1930s he played his part in curbing the excesses of Labour's left and re‐establishing Labour as a viable party of government. In May 1940, following the debate on the ill‐fated Norwegian campaign, he made it clear that Labour would not serve in a government headed by Neville
Chamberlain.
Under
Churchill Attlee served successively as lord privy seal, dominions secretary, and lord president. From 1942 he was also designated deputy prime minister and was the most powerful figure on the home front. With the resumption of party politics in the general election of 1945 Attlee was the beneficiary of the mood of popular radicalism. He emerged as the head of the first majority Labour government in British history.
As prime minister 1945–51 Attlee helped shape the development of British politics for the next quarter‐century. The administration presided over a substantial extension of the public ownership of British industry, the development of the welfare state including the creation of the National Health Service, and the establishment of Britain's position within the western alliance. Attlee headed a talented, if not always harmonious, group of senior ministers, which included Ernest
Bevin, Hugh Dalton, and Herbert
Morrison. Despite considerable difficulties, Labour sustained its public support.
Though Labour was again victorious in the general election of 1950, its massive majority of 1945 was all but wiped out. Party unity came under severe strain, while the outbreak of the
Korean War imposed new difficulties. Conservative tactics in the House of Commons made the business of government difficult and Attlee went to the country again in October 1951. Labour was narrowly defeated and the moment was perhaps opportune for Attlee to resign the leadership. As leader of the opposition Attlee engaged in little more than an exercise in damage limitation, failing to define a new role for the Labour movement. After a further electoral defeat in 1955, Attlee resigned and went to the House of Lords with an earldom.
A modest man by nature, Attlee came to enjoy great respect from the majority of those who worked under him and the electorate at large. Though the ideas of central planning, state intervention, and welfarism have been less in vogue over the last two decades, his historical reputation remains high.
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Strickland, Arthur Morrison
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Re-Visioning of the Heroic Journey in Postmodern Literature: Toni Morrison, Julia Alvarez, Arthur Miller, and American Beauty.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
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Interview: Dr. Joel Morrison discusses his former teacher, Arthur Robinson, and his contributions to cartography
Transcript from: NPR All Things Considered; 11/15/2004; ; 700+ words
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BOXING: King Arthur has it all to prove on the big knight; Morrison blasts fight hype.(Sport)
Newspaper article from: Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland); 10/10/2002; 646 words
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Gentle doctor, wife and widow Blake Morrison only got to know his mother properly after her death, finds Mark Sanderson
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 10/13/2002; ; 700+ words
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George A. Morrison.(Local)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 2/2/2009; 577 words
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THE THURSDAY BOOK: A labour of love from a true mummy's boy Things My Mother Never Told Me Blake Morrison Chatto & Windus, pounds 16.99
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 10/3/2002; ; 675 words
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Arthur Morrison
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Arthur Morrison 1863-1945, English novelist. A journalist, he worked on the National Observer for William Ernest Henley. His stories of life...
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Morrison, Arthur
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Morrison, Arthur (1863–1945), novelist, whose ‘realist’ tales of East End life in London were first published...
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Literature, Popular
Book article from: World of Forensic Science
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detective fiction
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
...conflict, and sharply dramatized character types. His success attracted hordes of followers and imitators, of whom Arthur Morrison and G. K. Chesterton were notable. The most engaging of the figures produced in reaction to Holmes's intellectuality...
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Strand Magazine
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Strand Magazine (1891–1950), a popular illustrated monthly founded by G. Newnes , which included amongst its contributions fiction by A. C. Doyle , H. G. Wells , Arthur Morrison , and a vast number of short stories of P. G. Wodehouse .
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