For more information on George Lansbury, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: George Lansbury |
For more information on George Lansbury, visit Britannica.com.
| 5min Related Video: George Lansbury |
| Political Biography: George Lansbury |
(b. Norfolk, 21 Feb. 1859; d. 7 May 1940) British; First Commissioner of Works 1929 – 31, leader of the Labour Party 1931 – 5 The son of a railway subcontractor, Lansbury received only elementary education before beginning work as a manual labourer. Initially a Liberal, he became a Christian Socialist and joined the Social Democratic Federation, which later affiliated to the Labour Party. Thereafter, Christianity was the core of his approach to politics.
After numerous unsuccessful candidatures Lansbury was eventually elected for Bow and Bromley in 1910. But he resigned his seat in 1912, in protest at the imprisonment of suffragettes. In 1913 he was imprisoned after a speech at a suffrage meeting. Out of parliament (until 1922) he was active in local government in Poplar (London) and was again imprisoned, for "Poplarism" — refusing to collect local rates from the unemployed. He also co-founded in 1912, and edited, the Daily Herald (later the Labour movement's official newspaper).
Lansbury held office in the second Labour government (1929 – 31), in the unprestigious (though Cabinet) post of First Commissioner of Works. His most enduring achievement was the creation of the Lido in Hyde Park. After the disastrous 1931 general election, Lansbury was the sole member of the previous Cabinet in the forty-six-strong Parliamentary Labour Party and became its leader. The inevitable arduousness of the task was exacerbated by criticism from former senior ministers on the party's National Executive Committee. Hitler's accession to power made the divergence between Lansbury's Christian pacifism and the party's official support for the League of Nations (and sanctions) increasingly pronounced. He resigned after vociferous criticism of his leadership at the Annual Conference in 1935 and subsequently had little influence on party policy although he remained in parliament until his death.
| British History: George Lansbury |
Lansbury, George (1859-1940). Christian socialist and pacifist. Lansbury came from working-class stock, and identified himself with socialist politics. In 1921 he and other members of Poplar Borough Council suffered imprisonment rather than authorize the payment, to the London County Council, of monies which they claimed impoverished London boroughs could not afford. Lansbury was excluded from the 1924 Labour government, but in 1929 he became first commissioner of works. In 1931 he was elected Labour leader in the Commons. His obsession with pacifism led him to oppose sanctions against Italy following Mussolini's invasion of Abyssinia, and in a dramatic gesture he resigned the leadership at the 1935 Labour conference.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: George Lansbury |
Bibliography
See his autobiographical Looking Backwards-and Forwards (1935); biographies by R. W. Postgate (1951), R. Holman (1990), and J. Schneer (1990).
| Wikipedia: George Lansbury |
| George Lansbury | |
|
|
|
| In office 25 October 1932 – 8 October 1935 |
|
| Preceded by | Arthur Henderson |
|---|---|
| Succeeded by | Clement Attlee |
|
|
|
| In office 7 June 1929 – 24 August 1931 |
|
| Preceded by | The Marquess of Londonderry |
| Succeeded by | The Marquess of Londonderry |
|
|
|
| Born | 21 February 1859 Halesworth, Suffolk, England |
| Died | 7 May 1940 (aged 81) Manor House Hospital, North London, England |
| Political party | Labour |
George Lansbury (21 February 1859 – 7 May 1940) was a British politician, socialist, Christian pacifist and newspaper editor. He was a Member of Parliament from 1910 to 1912 and from 1922 to 1940, and leader of the Labour Party from 1932 to 1935.
Contents |
George Lansbury was born 21 February 1859 in Halesworth, Suffolk, he became a campaigner for social justice and improved living and employment conditions for the working class, especially in London's East End.
His earliest political involvement was with the Liberal Party, which he joined in 1886. He acted as electoral agent for Samuel Montagu in Whitechapel at the General Election of 1886, and for Jane Cobden, who stood for election to the London County Council as a Liberal candidate in 1889. That year Lansbury took up the issue of pressing for a legal eight-hour day, but after failing to secure the support of the National Liberal Federation at their 1889 conference he became increasingly disillusioned by the Liberals. He came into contact with the Social Democratic Federation and, in support of the famous 1889 Dock Strike, joined the National Union of Municipal and General Workers.
Lansbury left the Liberal Party in 1892 and, with friends, formed the Bow and Bromley branch of the SDF. He became a prominent member of that organisation, standing twice as a parliamentary candidate for the SDF in the 1890s, before leaving to join the Independent Labour Party around 1903. In 1910, he became MP for Bow and Bromley, when the sitting Liberal MP retired and the Liberals supported his candidature. Two years later he clashed with Asquith in the House of Commons over the issue of women's suffrage and resigned his seat in order to stand in a by-election in support of the Suffragette movement. However he was unsuccessful, and did not return to the House of Commons for ten years. Continuing to support the campaign for women's suffrage, Lansbury was charged with sedition in 1913 and jailed in Pentonville. In Parliament, he defended authors of a "Don't Shoot" leaflet addressed to soldiers called to deal with militant strikers.
Lansbury helped found, in 1912, the Daily Herald, a socialist newspaper. He became editor just prior to World War I and used the paper to oppose the war, publishing a headline "War Is Hell" upon outbreak of fighting. In 1922 the Herald was desperately short of funds and Lansbury reluctantly handed over the paper to the Trades Union Congress and the Labour Party.
Instrumental in opening the first training school for destitute Poplar children in 1905 called Hutton Poplars situated near Hutton in the Essex countryside, the model for subsequent children's homes.
As Labour Mayor of Poplar, one of London's poorest boroughs, Lansbury led the Poplar Rates Rebellion in 1921, opposing not only the Government and the London County Council, but leaders of his own party. The borough council, instead of forwarding the precept of collected tax monies to LCC, dispersed the money as aid to the needy. Thirty councillors, including six women, were jailed by the High Court for six weeks. Council meetings during this time were held in Brixton Prison, until the government grew uneasy about the imprisonment and LCC asked the High Court to release the prisoners. A rates revision was achieved and Lansbury returned to Parliament at the 1922 general election, when he regained his old seat of Bromley and Bow.
Between 1925 and 1927 he edited Lansbury's Labour Weekly, which included columns by Ellen Wilkinson and Raymond Postgate and artwork by Reginald Brill.
Lansbury's standing within the Labour party grew and in 1927 he was elected Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party for 1927-28. In 1929 Lansbury became First Commissioner of Works in the second Labour government under Ramsay MacDonald. In this capacity, he was associated with the construction, amongst numerous other public works, of a large open air swimming pool on the Serpentine in Hyde Park, popularly known as 'Lansbury's Lido'. This led to him gaining the popular title "First Commissioner for Good Works".
Two years later the government fell, MacDonald deserted the Labour Party to form the National Government and the party went to a massive defeat in the 1931 General Election. The party's new leader Arthur Henderson and nearly every other leading Labour figure were defeated. Lansbury was the one exception and became Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party in 1931. The following year Henderson stood down from the leadership of the overall party and Lansbury succeeded him.
The Fulham East by-election in June 1933 was dominated by the issue of re-armament against Nazi Germany, following Germany's withdrawal from the League of Nations. Lansbury, a lifelong Christian pacifist, sent a message to the constituency in his position as Labour Leader:
Lansbury was a pacifist and found himself increasingly at odds with the official foreign policy of the party he was leading. On several occasions he offered to resign the leadership but his parliamentary colleagues dissuaded him, not least because there was no clear alternative leader. However in late 1935 the disagreements became more severe and public. Many in the Labour Party, particularly the Trade Union wing led by Ernest Bevin, were pushing for the party to support sanctions against Italy for its aggression against Abyssinia. Lansbury fundamentally disagreed with this. In the weeks leading up to the Labour Party Conference Lansbury's position was weakened when both Lord Ponsonby, the Labour leader in the House of Lords, and the Labour frontbencher and National Executive member Stafford Cripps, widely seen as Lansbury's political heir, resigned from their positions because they too opposed sanctions and felt it would be impossible to lead a party when they were in disagreement with it on the major political issue of the day.
Many wondered how Lansbury's leadership could survive, even though he retained an immense personal popularity. At the Conference this was publicly displayed by delegates, but then during a debate on foreign policy Ernest Bevin launched a withering attack on Lansbury. Heavily defeated in the vote, Lansbury determined to resign as leader. At a meeting of Labour MPs called shortly afterwards there was a great reluctance to accept his resignation, partially out of continued support but also because many Labour MPs feared that the next leader would be Arthur Greenwood, widely seen as heavily aligned to trade unionists like Bevin. In a vote the MPs voted by 38 to 7 with five abstentions to not accept Lansbury's resignation, but he insisted on stepping down.[1] When it came to selecting a successor (initially envisaged as a temporary position), Greenwood's name was not considered and the party instead unanimously elected Lansbury's deputy, Clement Attlee.
Lansbury was chair of the No More War Movement, chair of the War Resisters' International, 1936-1940, and President of the Peace Pledge Union, 1937-1940. He was a critic of British policy towards the Spanish Civil War and worked with Spanish pacifist José Brocca.
His efforts to prevent World War II led him, under the banner Embassies of Reconciliation, to visit most of the heads of government in Europe, including, controversially, both Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini. He also visited U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
He was an unusually popular politician, an elder statesman with a considerable following. He died of cancer on 7 May 1940, aged 81, in Manor House Hospital in North London.
George Lansbury was the father of Edgar and Daisy Lansbury; and father-in-law of suffragette Minnie Lansbury, Belfast-born actress Moyna MacGill, and historian and novelist Raymond Postgate. George Lansbury was grandfather of actress Angela Lansbury, producers Bruce and Edgar Lansbury, and animator and puppeteer Oliver Postgate.
George Lansbury lived at 39 Bow Road, Tower Hamlets. Sadly the family home was flattened during German bombing a few months after Lansbury's death in 1940. Today on the site there is a block of flats that bear Lansbury's name and carry a memorial plaque. Outside the flats, at the corner of Bow Road and Harley Grove, there is a stone memorial to George Lansbury with an inscription that includes the words "A great servant of the people."
George Lansbury's name and memory live on in the Lansbury Estate and Lansbury Gardens, East London, numerous London street names, and the aforementioned Lansbury's Lido that he founded on the Serpentine in London's Hyde Park.
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: George Lansbury |
| Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Alfred du Cros |
Member of Parliament for Bow and Bromley Dec 1910 – 1912 |
Succeeded by Reginald Blair |
| Preceded by Reginald Blair |
Member of Parliament for Bow and Bromley 1922 – 1940 |
Succeeded by Charles Key |
| Media offices | ||
| Preceded by Charles Lapworth |
Editor of the Daily Herald 1913 – 1922 |
Succeeded by W. P. Ryan |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by ? |
Chair of the Labour Party 1927 – 1928 |
Succeeded by Herbert Morrison |
| Preceded by The Marquess of Londonderry |
First Commissioner of Works 1929 – 1931 |
Succeeded by The Marquess of Londonderry |
| Preceded by Arthur Henderson |
Leader of the British Labour Party 1932 – 1935 |
Succeeded by Clement Attlee |
| Leader of the Opposition 1932 – 1935 |
||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Ernest Bevin | |
| Clement Attlee | |
| A Stephen Sondheim Evening (1983 Album by Stephen Sondheim) |
Copyrights:
![]() | Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Political Biography. A Dictionary of Political Biography. Copyright © 1998, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "George Lansbury". Read more |
Mentioned in