Stanley Baldwin
Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley (August 3, 1867 - December 14, 1947) was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on three separate occasions.
Born at Bewdley in Worcestershire he was educated at Harrow and Cambridge, and went into the family business. He became a Conservative MP in 1908, and was appointed president of the Board of Trade in 1921. The unexpected illness and death from cancer of Andrew Bonar Law resulted in Baldwin being selected to replace him as prime minister in 1923, but his government lasted only months.
After a brief interlude in which Britain's first-ever Labour government came to power, Baldwin regained his position as prime minister in the following year, and retained it until 1929. This period included the General Strike of 1926, a crisis which the government managed to weather, despite the havoc it caused nationally. In 1931 he and the Conservatives entered into a coalition with Labour Party Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald. This decision led to MacDonald's expulsion from his own party, and Baldwin, as Lord President of the Council became de facto Prime Minister for the increasingly senile MacDonald over the next four years, when he, once again, became Prime Minister. During his third term of office, in 1935 - 1937, his foreign policy was much criticised, and he also faced the problem of the abdication of King Edward VIII. In the face of the growing Nazi threat to Europe, he resigned and was created Earl Baldwin of Bewdley.
Stanley Baldwin's First Government, May 1923 - January 1924
Changes
- 1923 - Neville Chamberlain became Chancellor of the Exchequer. Sir William Joynson Hicks succeeded him as Minister of Health. Joynson-Hicks' successor as Financial Secretary to the Treasury was not in the Cabinet.
Stanley Baldwin's Second Cabinet, November 1924 - June 1929
Changes
- 1925 On Curzon's death, Lord Balfour succeeded him as Lord President. W. Guinness succeeded E.F.L. Wood as Minister of Agriculture.
- 1927 - Lord Cushendun succeeded Lord Cecil as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
- 1928 - Lord Hailsham (former Sir D. Hogg) succeeded Lord Cave as Lord Chancellor. Hailsham's successor as Attorney-General was not in the Cabinet. Lord Peel succeeded Birkenhead as Secretary of State for India. Lord Londonderry succeeded Lord Peel as First Commissioner of Public Works
Stanley Baldwin's Third Cabinet, May 1935 - May 1937
- Stanley Baldwin - Prime Minister
- Lord Hailsham - Lord Chancellor
- Ramsay MacDonald - Lord President
- Lord Londonderry - Lord Privy Seal
- Neville Chamberlain - Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Sir John Simon - Home Secretary
- Sir Samuel Hoare - Foreign Secretary
- Malcolm MacDonald - Colonial Secretary
- James H. Thomas - Dominions Secretary
- Lord Halifax - Secretary for War
- Lord Zetland - Secretary for India
- Lord Swinton - Secretary for Air
- Sir G. Collins - Secretary for Scotland
- Lord Monsell - First Lord of the Admiralty
- Lord Runciman - President of the Board of Trade
- W. Elliott - Minister of Agriculture
- O. Stanley - President of the Board of Education
- E. Brown - Minister of Labour
- Sir Kingsley Wood - Minister of Health
- W. Ormsby-Gore - First Commissioner of Works
- Anthony Eden - Minister of League of Nations Affairs
- Lord Percy - Minister without Portfolio
Changes
- 1935 - Malcolm MacDonald succeeds J.H. Thomas as Dominions Secretary. Thomas succeeds MacDonald as Colonial Secretary. Lord Halifax succeeds Lord Londonderry as Lord Privy Seal. Duff Cooper succeeds Halifax as Secretary for War. Anthony Eden succeeds Sir Samuel Hoare as Foreign Secretary.
- 1936 - William Ormsby-Gore succeeds J.H. Thomas as Colonial Secretary. Lord Stanhope succeeds Ormsby-Gore as First Commissioner of Works. W. Elliott succeeds Sir G. Collins as Secretary for Scotland. W.S. Morrison succeeds Elliott as Minister of Agriculture. Samuel Hoare succeeds Lord Monsell as First Lord of the Admiralty. Lord Percy leaves the cabinet. Sir T. Inskip enters the cabinet as Minister for the Coordination of Defense. Leslie Hore-Belisha enters the Cabinet as Minister of Transport.
Referenced By
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