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Sir Charles Dilke, 2nd Baronet

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Sir Charles Wentworth 2nd Baronet Dilke
 

(born Sept. 4, 1843, London, Eng. — died Jan. 26, 1911, London) British politician. He was elected to Parliament in 1868, first as an extremist then as a moderate. In 1882 he became a member of William E. Gladstone's cabinet and was seen as a future prime minister. He was ruined at the height of his career when he was cited as a corespondent in a sensational divorce suit in 1886. Dilke denied the woman's story, and the accumulated evidence showed that much of it was a fabrication. He returned to the House of Commons (1892 – 1911), where he promoted progressive labor legislation and gained a reputation as a military expert.

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British History: Sir Charles Dilke
 

Dilke, Sir Charles (1843-1911). Liberal politician. Dilke is supposed to have ruined his chance of becoming prime minister by his involvement as co-respondent in a famous divorce case (Crawford v. Crawford) in 1885-6; but he probably would not have made it anyway. Before this happened he was better known as a radical, a close ally of Joseph Chamberlain, an early propagandist for the British empire, and one of the most boring speakers in the House of Commons.

 
Wikipedia: Sir Charles Dilke, 2nd Baronet
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Sir Charles Dilke, Bt 
PC
Sir Charles Dilke, 2nd Baronet

In office
28 December 1882 – 9 June 1885
Monarch Victoria
Prime Minister William Gladstone
Preceded by John George Dodson
Succeeded by Arthur Balfour

Born 4 September 1843 (1843-09-04)
Died 26 January 1911 (1911-01-27)
Nationality British
Political party Liberal
Spouse Emilia Strong
(1840-1904)
Alma mater Trinity Hall, Cambridge

Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke, 2nd Baronet PC (4 September 1843 – 26 January 1911), was an English Liberal and reformist politician. Touted as a future prime minister, his political career was effectively terminated in 1885, after a notorious and well-publicised divorce case.

Contents

Background and education

Dilke was the son of Sir Charles Dilke, 1st Baronet. He was educated at Westminster School and Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where he was President of the Cambridge Union Society.[1] His wife was the feminist art historian Emilia, Lady Dilke.[2]

Political career, 1868-1886

Dilke became Liberal Member of Parliament for Chelsea in 1868, a seat he held until 1885. He was Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs from 1880 to 1882 during Gladstone's second government and was admitted to the Privy Council in 1882. In December 1882 he entered the cabinet as President of the Local Government Board, serving until 1885. A leading and determined radical within the Liberal party, he negotiated the passage of the Third Reform Act, which the Conservatives allowed through the House of Lords in return for redistribution favourable to themselves (the granting of the vote to agricultural labourers threatened Conservative dominance of rural seats, but in return many double-member seats were abolished and seats redistributed to suburbia, where Conservative support was growing). He also supported laws giving the municipal franchise to women, legalising labour unions, improving working conditions and limiting working hours, as well as being one of the earliest campaigners for universal schooling.

The Crawford scandal

Dilke had, both before and after his first marriage, been the lover of Ellen, wife of Thomas Eustace Smith and his late brother's mother-in-law. That fact notwithstanding, in July 1885 he was the subject of accusations that he had seduced the Eustace Smiths' daughter Virginia in the first year of her marriage to Donald Crawford MP. This was supposed to have occurred in 1882 when Virginia was 19, and she claimed that the affair had continued on an irregular basis for the next two and a half years. The accusations had a devastating effect on Dilke's political career, leading to his eventual loss of his parliamentary seat (Chelsea) in the 1886 UK general election.[3]

Crawford's inevitable divorce was heard on 12 February 1886 before The Hon. Mr Justice Butt in the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division. Virginia Crawford was not in court and the sole evidence was her husband's account of Virginia's confession and some fairly insubstantial circumstantial accounts of servants. Dilke, largely on the advice of his confidante Joseph Chamberlain and aware of his vulnerability over the affair with Virginia's mother, did not give evidence. Butt said "I cannot see any case whatsoever against Sir Charles Dilke" and found – paradoxically – that though Virginia had been guilty of adultery with Dilke, there was no admissible evidence to show that Dilke had been guilty of adultery with Virginia. He therefore dismissed Dilke from the suit with costs, and pronounced a decree nisi dissolving the Crawfords' marriage.[3]

Investigative journalist William Thomas Stead then launched a public campaign against Dilke. Such a paradoxical finding by the court left doubts hanging over Dilke's respectability and in April 1886, he sought to clear his name and re-open the case through the device of the Queen's Proctor being made a party to the case and opposing the decree absolute.[4] Unfortunately, Dilke and his legal team had badly miscalculated. Though they had planned to subject Virginia to a searching cross-examination, Dilke, having been dismissed from the case, had no locus standi. The consequence was that it was Dilke who was subjected to severe scrutiny in the witness box by Henry Matthews. Matthews' attack was devastating and Dilke proved an unconvincing witness. His habit of physically cutting pieces out of his diary with scissors was held up to particular ridicule, as it created the impression that he had cut out evidence of potentially embarrassing appointments. The jury[5] found that the decree absolute should be granted and that Victoria had presented the true version of the facts. Dilke was ruined and for a time seemed likely to be tried for perjury.[3]

Dilke spent much of the remainder of his life and much of his fortune in trying to exonerate himself and it does appear likely that Virginia lied. It further seems probable that someone other than Dilke was her lover and a number of conspiracy theories have been put forward over the years implicating various men, including Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery and Chamberlain himself.[3] Various lurid rumours circulated about Dilke's alleged love-life, such as that he had invited a maidservant to join himself and his lover in bed, and that he had introduced one or more of these to "every kind of French vice".[citation needed]

Political career after 1886

Dilke later became MP for Forest of Dean in 1892, serving until his death in 1911. He had hoped to be appointed Secretary of State for War in the Liberal Government formed in 1905, but this was not to be.

Cultural references

In the 1994 film Sirens, detailing sexual licence in Australia in the 1930s, the local pub is called the "Sir Charles Dilke".

Notes

  1. ^ Dilke, Charles in Venn, J. & J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, Cambridge University Press, 10 vols, 1922–1958.
  2. ^ Dictionary of Art historians: "Emilia, Lady Dilke"
  3. ^ a b c d Jenkins (2004)
  4. ^ Crawford v. Crawford and Dilke (The Queen's Proctor intervening) (1886) 11 PD 150
  5. ^ Juries were still used in civil trials in the UK until the 1930s.

Bibliography

External links


Parliament of the United Kingdom
New constituency Member of Parliament for Chelsea
1868 – 1886
With: Sir Henry Hoare, Bt 1868–1874
William Gordon 1874–1880
Joseph Firth Bottomley Firth 1880–1885
Succeeded by
Charles Algernon Whitmore
Preceded by
Godfrey Blundell Samuelson
Member of Parliament for Forest of Dean
1892–1911
Succeeded by
Henry Webb
Political offices
Preceded by
Hon. Robert Bourke
Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
1880–1882
Succeeded by
Lord Edmond FitzMaurice
Preceded by
John George Dodson
President of the Local Government Board
1882–1885
Succeeded by
Arthur Balfour
Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Charles Wentworth Dilke
Baronet
(of Sloane Street)
1869–1911
Succeeded by
Charles Wentworth Dilke

 
 

 

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sir Charles Dilke, 2nd Baronet" Read more