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Arthur Balfour

Arthur James Balfour, 1st Earl of Balfour, KG, OM, PC, FRS, FBA, DL (/ˈbælfər, -fɔːr/,[1] traditionally Scottish /bəlˈfʊər/;[2][3] 25 July 1848 – 19 March 1930), also known as Lord Balfour, was a British statesman and Conservative politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1902 to 1905. As foreign secretary in the Lloyd George ministry, he issued the Balfour Declaration of 1917 on behalf of the cabinet, which supported a "home for the Jewish people" in Palestine.

The Earl of Balfour
1902 portrait
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office
12 July 1902 – 4 December 1905
MonarchEdward VII
Preceded byThe Marquess of Salisbury
Succeeded byHenry Campbell-Bannerman
Senior political offices
Leader of the Opposition
In office
27 February 1906 – 13 November 1911
Monarchs
Prime MinisterHenry Campbell-Bannerman
H. H. Asquith
Preceded byJoseph Chamberlain (Commons Leader)
Succeeded byBonar Law
In office
5 December 1905 – 8 February 1906
MonarchEdward VII
Prime MinisterHenry Campbell-Bannerman
Preceded byHenry Campbell-Bannerman
Succeeded byJoseph Chamberlain (Commons Leader)
Leader of the Conservative Party
In office
11 July 1902 – 13 November 1911
Preceded byThe Marquess of Salisbury
Succeeded byBonar Law
Ministerial offices 1915‍–‍1929
Lord President of the Council
In office
27 April 1925 – 4 June 1929
Prime MinisterStanley Baldwin
Preceded byThe Marquess Curzon of Kedleston
Succeeded byThe Lord Parmoor
In office
23 October 1919 – 19 October 1922
Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George
Preceded byThe Earl Curzon of Kedleston
Succeeded byThe 4th Marquess of Salisbury
Foreign Secretary
In office
10 December 1916 – 23 October 1919
Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George
Preceded byThe Viscount Grey of Fallodon
Succeeded byThe Earl Curzon of Kedleston
First Lord of the Admiralty
In office
25 May 1915 – 10 December 1916
Prime Minister
Preceded byWinston Churchill
Succeeded byEdward Carson
Ministerial offices 1885‍–‍1903
Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal
In office
11 July 1902 – 17 October 1903
Prime MinisterThe 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
Preceded byThe 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
Succeeded byThe 4th Marquess of Salisbury
Chief Secretary for Ireland
In office
7 March 1887 – 9 November 1891
Prime MinisterThe 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
Preceded byMichael Hicks Beach
Succeeded byWilliam Jackson
Secretary for Scotland
In office
5 August 1886 – 11 March 1887
Prime MinisterThe 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
Preceded byThe Earl of Dalhousie
Succeeded byThe Marquess of Lothian
President of the Local Government Board
In office
24 June 1885 – 1 February 1886
Prime MinisterThe 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
Preceded byCharles Dilke
Succeeded byJoseph Chamberlain
Parliamentary offices
Member of the House of Lords
Hereditary peerage
5 May 1922 – 19 March 1930
Preceded byPeerage created
Succeeded byThe 2nd Earl of Balfour
Member of Parliament
for the City of London
In office
27 February 1906 – 5 May 1922
Preceded byAlban Gibbs
Succeeded byEdward Grenfell
Member of Parliament
for Manchester East
In office
18 December 1885 – 8 January 1906
Preceded byConstituency created
Succeeded byThomas Horridge
Member of Parliament
for Hertford
In office
17 February 1874 – 18 November 1885
Preceded byRobert Dimsdale
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Personal details
Born
Arthur James Balfour

(1848-07-25)25 July 1848
Whittingehame House, East Lothian, Scotland
Died19 March 1930(1930-03-19) (aged 81)
Woking, Surrey, England
Resting placeWhittingehame Church, Whittingehame
Political partyConservative
Parent
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Signature

Entering Parliament in 1874, Balfour achieved prominence as Chief Secretary for Ireland, in which position he suppressed agrarian unrest whilst taking measures against absentee landlords. He opposed Irish Home Rule, saying there could be no half-way house between Ireland remaining within the United Kingdom or becoming independent. From 1891 he led the Conservative Party in the House of Commons, serving under his uncle, Lord Salisbury, whose government won large majorities in 1895 and 1900. An esteemed debater, he was bored by the mundane tasks of party management.

In July 1902, he succeeded his uncle as prime minister. In domestic policy he passed the Land Purchase (Ireland) Act 1903, which bought out most of the Anglo-Irish land owners. The Education Act 1902 had a major long-term impact in modernising the school system in England and Wales and provided financial support for schools operated by the Church of England and by the Catholic Church. Nonconformists were outraged and mobilised their voters, but were unable to reverse it. In foreign and defence policy, he oversaw reform of British defence policy and supported Jackie Fisher's naval innovations. He secured the Entente Cordiale with France, an alliance that ended centuries of intermittent conflict between the two states and their predecessors. He cautiously embraced imperial preference as championed by Joseph Chamberlain, but resignations from the Cabinet over the abandonment of free trade left his party divided. He also suffered from public anger at the later stages of the Boer War (counter-insurgency warfare characterised as "methods of barbarism") and the importation of Chinese labour to South Africa ("Chinese slavery"). He resigned as prime minister in December 1905 and the following month the Conservatives suffered a landslide defeat at the 1906 election, in which he lost his own seat. He soon re-entered Parliament and continued to serve as Leader of the Opposition throughout the crisis over Lloyd George's 1909 budget, the narrow loss of two further General Elections in 1910, and the passage of the Parliament Act 1911. He resigned as party leader in 1911.

Balfour returned as First Lord of the Admiralty in Asquith's Coalition Government (1915–1916). In December 1916, he became foreign secretary in David Lloyd George's coalition. He was frequently left out of the inner workings of foreign policy, although the Balfour Declaration on a Jewish homeland bore his name. He continued to serve in senior positions throughout the 1920s, and died in 1930, aged 81, having spent a vast inherited fortune. He never married. Balfour trained as a philosopher – he originated an argument against believing that human reason could determine truth – and was seen as having a detached attitude to life, epitomised by a remark attributed to him: "Nothing matters very much and few things matter at all".

Background and early life edit

 
Whittingehame House

Arthur Balfour was born at Whittingehame House, East Lothian, Scotland, the eldest son of James Maitland Balfour and Lady Blanche Gascoyne-Cecil. His father was a Scottish MP, as was his grandfather James; his mother, a member of the Cecil family descended from Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury, was the daughter of the 2nd Marquess of Salisbury and a sister of the 3rd Marquess, the future prime minister.[4] His godfather was the Duke of Wellington, after whom he was named.[5] He was the eldest son, third of eight children, and had four brothers and three sisters. Arthur Balfour was educated at Grange Preparatory School at Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire (1859–1861), and Eton College (1861–1866), where he studied with the influential master, William Johnson Cory. He then went up to the University of Cambridge, where he read moral sciences at Trinity College (1866–1869),[6] graduating with a second-class honours degree.[7] His younger brother was the Cambridge embryologist Francis Maitland Balfour (1851–1882).[8]

Personal life edit

Balfour met his cousin May Lyttelton in 1870 when she was 19. After her two previous serious suitors had died, Balfour is said to have declared his love for her in December 1874. She died of typhus on Palm Sunday, 21 March 1875; Balfour arranged for an emerald ring to be buried in her coffin. Lavinia Talbot, May's older sister, believed that an engagement had been imminent, but her recollections of Balfour's distress (he was "staggered") were not written down until thirty years later.[9]: 29–33 

Historian R. J. Q. Adams points out that May's letters discuss her love life in detail, but contain no evidence that she was in love with Balfour, nor that he had spoken to her of marriage. He visited her only once during her serious three-month illness, and was soon accepting social invitations again within a month of her death. Adams suggests that, although he may simply have been too shy to express his feelings fully, Balfour may also have encouraged tales of his youthful tragedy as a convenient cover for his disinclination to marry; the matter cannot be conclusively proven.[9]: 29–33 

In later years mediums claimed to pass on messages from her – see the "Cross-Correspondences".[10][11]

Balfour remained a lifelong bachelor. Margot Tennant (later Margot Asquith) wished to marry him, but Balfour said: "No, that is not so. I rather think of having a career of my own."[5] His household was maintained by his also unmarried sister, Alice. In middle age, Balfour had a 40-year friendship with Mary Charteris (née Wyndham), Lady Elcho, later Countess of Wemyss and March.[12]

Although one biographer writes that "it is difficult to say how far the relationship went", her letters suggest they may have become lovers in 1887 and may have engaged in sado-masochism,[9]: 47  a claim echoed by A. N. Wilson.[11] Another biographer believes they had "no direct physical relationship", although he dismisses as "unlikely" suggestions that Balfour was homosexual, or, in view of a time during the Boer War when he was seen as he replied to a message while drying himself after his bath, Lord Beaverbrook's claim that he was "a hermaphrodite" whom no-one saw naked.[13]

Balfour was a leading member of the social and intellectual group The Souls.

Early career edit

 
Balfour early in his career

In 1874 Balfour was elected Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Hertford until 1885. From 1885 to 1906 he served as the Member of Parliament for Manchester East. In spring 1878, he became private secretary to his uncle Lord Salisbury. He accompanied Salisbury (then foreign secretary) to the Congress of Berlin and gained his first experience in international politics in connection with the settlement of the Russo-Turkish conflict. At the same time he became known in the world of letters; the academic subtlety and literary achievement of his Defence of Philosophic Doubt (1879) suggested he might make a reputation as a philosopher.[14][7]

Balfour divided his time between politics and academic pursuits. Biographer Sydney Zebel suggested that Balfour continued to appear an amateur or dabbler in public affairs, devoid of ambition and indifferent to policy issues. However, in fact he actually made a dramatic transition to a deeply involved politician. His assets, according to Zebel, included a strong ambition that he kept hidden, shrewd political judgment, a knack for negotiation, a taste for intrigue, and care to avoid factionalism. Most importantly, he deepened his close ties with his uncle Lord Salisbury. He also maintained cordial relationships with Disraeli, Gladstone and other national leaders.[15]: 27 

Released from his duties as private secretary by the 1880 general election, he began to take more part in parliamentary affairs. He was for a time politically associated with Lord Randolph Churchill, Sir Henry Drummond Wolff and John Gorst. This quartet became known as the "Fourth Party" and gained notoriety for leader Lord Randolph Churchill's free criticism of Sir Stafford Northcote, Lord Cross and other prominent members of the Conservative "old gang".[15]: 28–44 [16]

Service in Lord Salisbury's governments edit

 
Balfour c. 1890

Irish Secretary edit

In 1885, Lord Salisbury appointed Balfour President of the Local Government Board; the following year he became Secretary for Scotland with a seat in the cabinet.[17] These offices, while offering few opportunities for distinction, were an apprenticeship. In early 1887, Sir Michael Hicks Beach, the Chief Secretary for Ireland, resigned because of illness and Salisbury appointed his nephew in his place. The selection was much criticized. It was received with contemptuous ridicule by the Irish Nationalists, for none suspected Balfour's immense strength of will, his debating power, his ability in attack and his still greater capacity to disregard criticism.[18] Balfour surprised critics by ruthless enforcement of the Crimes Act. The Mitchelstown Massacre occurred on 9 September 1887, when Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) members fired at a crowd protesting against the conviction under the Act of MP William O'Brien and another man.[19] Three were killed by the RIC's gunfire. When Balfour defended the RIC in the Commons, O'Brien dubbed him "Bloody Balfour".[20] His steady administration did much to dispel his reputation as a political lightweight.[21]

In Parliament he resisted overtures to the Irish Parliamentary Party on Home Rule, which he saw as an expression of superficial or false Irish nationalism. Allied with Joseph Chamberlain's Liberal Unionists, he encouraged Unionist activism in Ireland. Balfour also helped the poor by creating the Congested Districts Board for Ireland in 1890. Balfour downplayed the factor of Irish nationalism, arguing that the real issues were economic. Regarding ownership and control of the land, he believed that once violence was suppressed and land was sold to the tenants, Irish nationalism would no longer threaten the unity of the United Kingdom. The slogan "to kill home rule with kindness" characterized Balfour's new policy toward Ireland.[22] The Liberals had begun land sales to Irish tenants with the Land Law (Ireland) Act 1881 and this was expanded by the Conservatives in the land purchase scheme of 1885. However the depression in agriculture kept prices low. Balfour's solution was to keep selling land and in 1887 lowering rents to match the lower prices, and protected more tenants against eviction by their landlords.[23] Balfour greatly expanded the land sales. They culminated in the final Unionist land purchase programme of 1903, when Balfour was prime minister and George Wyndham was the Irish secretary. It encouraged landlords to sell by means of a 12% cash bonus. Tenants were encouraged to buy with a low interest rate, and payments drawn out over 68 years. In 1909, Liberal legislation required compulsory sales in certain cases. As the landlords sold out, they relocated to Great Britain, giving up their political power in Ireland. Tensions in the countryside dramatically declined as some 200,000 peasant proprietors owned about half the land in Ireland. After 1890 violence declined sharply, and as Balfour had hoped, Irish nationalism was a relatively minor factor. The situation suddenly was transformed when the Easter rebellion of 1916 radicalised Ireland.[24][25]

Leadership roles edit

 
Balfour in 1891, by Lawrence Alma-Tadema

In 1886–1892 he became one of the most effective public speakers of the age. Impressive in matter rather than delivery, his speeches were logical and convincing, and delighted an ever-wider audience.[18]

On the death of W. H. Smith in 1891, Balfour became First Lord of the Treasury – the last in British history not to have been concurrently prime minister as well – and Leader of the House of Commons. After the fall of the government in 1892 he spent three years in opposition. When the Conservatives returned to power, in coalition with the Liberal Unionists, in 1895, Balfour again became Leader of the House and First Lord of the Treasury. His management of the abortive education proposals of 1896 showed a disinclination for the drudgery of parliamentary management, yet he saw the passage of a bill providing Ireland with improved local government under the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 and joined in debates on foreign and domestic questions between 1895 and 1900.[18]

During the illness of Lord Salisbury in 1898, and again in Salisbury's absence abroad, Balfour was in charge of the Foreign Office, and he conducted negotiations with Russia on the question of railways in North China. As a member of the cabinet responsible for the Transvaal negotiations in 1899, he bore his share of controversy and, when the Second Boer War began disastrously, he was first to realise the need to use the country's full military strength. His leadership of the House was marked by firmness in the suppression of obstruction, yet there was a slight revival of the criticisms of 1896.[18]

Prime minister edit

With Lord Salisbury's resignation on 11 July 1902, Balfour succeeded him as prime minister, with the approval of all the Unionist party. The new prime minister came into power practically at the same moment as the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra and the end of the South African War.[7] The Liberal party was still disorganised over the Boers.[26]

In foreign affairs, Balfour and his foreign secretary, Lord Lansdowne, improved relations with France, culminating in the Entente Cordiale of 1904. The period also saw the Russo-Japanese War, when Britain, an ally of the Japanese, came close to war with Russia after the Dogger Bank incident. On the whole, Balfour left the conduct of foreign policy to Lansdowne, being busy himself with domestic problems.[15]

Balfour, who had known Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann since 1906, opposed Russian mistreatment of Jews and increasingly supported Zionism as a programme for European Jews to settle in Palestine.[27] However, in 1905 he supported the Aliens Act 1905, one of whose main objectives was to control and restrict Jewish immigration from Eastern Europe.[28][29]

The budget was certain to show a surplus and taxation could be remitted. Yet as events proved, it was the budget that would sow dissension, override other legislative concerns and signal a new political movement. Charles Thomson Ritchie's remission of the shilling import-duty on corn led to Joseph Chamberlain's crusade in favour of tariff reform. These were taxes on imported goods with trade preference given to the Empire, to protect British industry from competition, strengthen the Empire in the face of growing German and American economic power, and provide revenue, other than raising taxes, for the social welfare legislation. As the session proceeded, the rift grew in the Unionist ranks.[26] Tariff reform was popular with Unionist supporters, but the threat of higher prices for food imports made the policy an electoral albatross. Hoping to split the difference between the free traders and tariff reformers in his cabinet and party, Balfour favoured retaliatory tariffs to punish others who had tariffs against the British, in the hope of encouraging global free trade. This was not sufficient for either the free traders or the extreme tariff reformers in government. With Balfour's agreement, Chamberlain resigned from the Cabinet in late 1903 to campaign for tariff reform. At the same time, Balfour tried to balance the two factions by accepting the resignation of three free-trading ministers, including Chancellor Ritchie, but the almost simultaneous resignation of the free-trader Duke of Devonshire (who as Lord Hartington had been the Liberal Unionist leader of the 1880s) left Balfour's Cabinet weak. By 1905 few Unionist MPs were still free traders (Winston Churchill crossed to the Liberals in 1904 when threatened with deselection at Oldham), but Balfour's act had drained his authority within the government.[15]

Balfour resigned as prime minister in December 1905, hoping the Liberal leader Campbell-Bannerman would be unable to form a strong government. This was dashed when Campbell-Bannerman faced down an attempt ("The Relugas Compact") to "kick him upstairs" to the House of Lords. The Conservatives were defeated by the Liberals at the general election the following January (in terms of MPs, a Liberal landslide), with Balfour losing his seat at Manchester East to Thomas Gardner Horridge, a solicitor and King's Counsel. Only 157 Conservatives were returned to the Commons, at least two-thirds followers of Chamberlain, who chaired the Conservative MPs until Balfour won a by-election for a safe seat in the City of London.[30]

Achievements and mistakes edit

According to historian Robert Ensor, Balfour can be credited with achievement in five major areas:[31]: 355 

  1. The Education Act 1902 (and a similar measure for London in 1903);[32]
  2. The Land Purchase (Ireland) Act 1903, which bought out the Anglo-Irish land owners;[33][34]
  3. The Licensing Act 1904;[35]
  4. In military policy, the creation of the Committee of Imperial Defence (1904) and support for Sir John Fisher's naval reforms.
  5. In foreign policy, the Anglo-French Convention (1904), which formed the basis of the Entente Cordiale with France.

The Education Act lasted four decades and eventually was highly praised. Eugene Rasor states, "Balfour was credited and much praised from many perspectives with the success [of the 1902 education act]. His commitment to education was fundamental and strong."[36]: 20  At the time it hurt Balfour because the Liberal party used it to rally their Noncomformist supporters. Ensor said the Act ranked:

among the two or three greatest constructive measures of the twentieth century....[He did not write it] but no statesman less dominated than Balfour was by the concept of national efficiency would have taken it up and carried it through, since its cost on the side of votes was obvious and deterrent....Public money was thus made available for the first time to ensure properly paid teachers and a standardized level of efficiency for all children alike [including the Anglican and Catholic schools].[31]: 355–56 

For most of the 19th century, the very powerful political and economic position of the Church of Ireland (Anglican) landowners opposed the political aspirations of Irish nationalists. Balfour's solution was to buy them out, not by compulsion, but by offering the owners a full immediate payment and a 12% bonus on the sales price. The British government purchased 13 million acres (53,000 km2) by 1920, and sold farms to the tenants at low payments spread over seven decades. It would cost money, but all sides proved amenable.[31]: 358–60  Starting in 1923 the Irish government bought out most of the remaining landowners, and in 1933 diverted payments being made to the British treasury and used them for local improvements.[37]

Balfour's introduction of Chinese coolie labour in South Africa enabled the Liberals to counterattack, charging that his measures amounted to "Chinese slavery".[31]: 355, 376–78 [38] Likerwise Liberals energized the Nonconformists when they attacked Balfour's Licensing Act 1904 which paid pub owners to close down. In the long run it did reduce the great oversupply of pubs, while in the short run Balfour's party was hurt.[31]: 360–61 

Balfour failed to solve his greatest political challenge – the debate over tariffs that ripped his party apart. Chamberlain proposed to turn the Empire into a closed trade bloc protected by high tariffs against imports from Germany and the United States. He argued that tariff reform would revive a flagging British economy, strengthen imperial ties with the dominions and the colonies, and produce a positive programme that would facilitate reelection. He was vehemently opposed by Conservative free traders who denounced the proposal as economically fallacious, and open to the charge of raising food prices in Britain. Balfour tried to forestall disruption by removing key ministers on each side, and offering a much narrower tariff programme. It was ingenious, but both sides rejected any compromise, and his party's chances for reelection were ruined.[39][40]: 4–6 

Historians generally praised Balfour's achievements in military and foreign policy. Cannon & Crowcroft 2015 stress the importance of the Anglo‐French Entente of 1904, and the establishment of the Committee of Imperial Defence.[41] Rasor points to twelve historians who have examined his key role in naval and military reforms.[36]: 39–40 [31]: 361–71  However, there was little political payback at the time. The local Conservative campaigns in 1906 focused mostly on a few domestic issues.[42] Balfour gave strong support for Jackie Fisher's naval reforms.[43]

Balfour created and chaired the Committee of Imperial Defence, which provided better long-term coordinated planning between the Army and Navy.[44] Austen Chamberlain said Britain would have been unprepared for the First World War without his Committee of Imperial Defence. He wrote, "It is impossible to overrate the services thus rendered by Balfour to the Country and Empire....[Without the CID] victory would have been impossible."[45] Historians also praised the Anglo-French Convention (1904), which formed the basis of the Entente Cordiale with France that proved decisive in 1914.[46]

Balfour may have been personally sympathetic to extending suffrage, with his brother Gerald, Conservative MP for Leeds Central married to women's suffrage activist Constance Lytton's sister Betty,[47] but he accepted the strength of the political opposition to women's suffrage, as shown in correspondence with Christabel Pankhurst, a leader of the WSPU. Balfour argued that he was "not convinced the majority of women actually wanted the vote", in 1907. A rebuttal which meant extending the activist campaign for women's rights.[47] He was reminded by Lytton of a speech he made in 1892, namely that this question "will arise again, menacing and ripe for resolution", she asked him to meet WSPU leader, Christabel Pankhurst, after a series of hunger strikes and suffering by imprisoned suffragettes in 1907. Balfour refused on the grounds of her militancy.[47] Christabel pleaded direct to meet Balfour as Conservative party leader, on their policy manifesto for the General Election of 1909,[dubious ] but he refused again as women's suffrage was "not a party question and his colleagues were divided on the matter".[47] She tried and failed again to get his open support in parliament for women's cause in the 1910 private member's Conciliation Bill.[47] He voted for the bill in the end but not for its progress to the Grand Committee, preventing it becoming law, and extending the activist campaigns as a result again.[47] The following year Lytton and Annie Kenney in person after another reading of the Bill, but again it was not prioritised as government business.[47] His sister-in-law Lady Betty Balfour spoke to Churchill that her brother was to speak for this policy, and also met the Prime Minister, H.H. Asquith in a 1911 delegation of the women's movements representing the Conservative and Unionist Women's Franchise Association[47] but it was not until 1918 that (some) women were given the right to vote in elections in the United Kingdom, despite a forty-year campaign.[47]

Later career edit

 
Painting by John Singer Sargent, 1908
 
Balfour caricatured by Vanity Fair, 1910
 
Balfour and Winston Churchill in 1911

After the general election of 1906 Balfour remained party leader, his position strengthened by Joseph Chamberlain's absence from the House of Commons after his stroke in July 1906, but he was unable to make much headway against the huge Liberal majority in the Commons. An early attempt to score a debating triumph over the government, made in Balfour's usual abstruse, theoretical style, saw Campbell-Bannerman respond with: "Enough of this foolery," to the delight of his supporters. Balfour made the controversial decision, with Lord Lansdowne, to use the heavily Unionist House of Lords as a check on the political programme and legislation of the Liberal party in the Commons. Legislation was vetoed or altered by amendments between 1906 and 1909, leading David Lloyd George to remark that the Lords was "the right hon. Gentleman's poodle. It fetches and carries for him. It barks for him. It bites anybody that he sets it on to. And we are told that this is a great revising Chamber, the safeguard of liberty in the country."[48] The issue was forced by the Liberals with Lloyd George's People's Budget, provoking the constitutional crisis that led to the Parliament Act 1911, which limited the Lords to delaying bills for up to two years. After the Unionists lost the general elections of 1910 (despite softening the tariff reform policy with Balfour's promise of a referendum on food taxes), the Unionist peers split to allow the Parliament Act to pass the House of Lords, to prevent mass creation of Liberal peers by the new King, George V. The exhausted Balfour resigned as party leader after the crisis, and was succeeded in late 1911 by Bonar Law.[15]

Balfour remained important in the party, however, and when the Unionists joined Asquith's coalition government in May 1915, Balfour succeeded Churchill as First Lord of the Admiralty. When Asquith's government collapsed in December 1916, Balfour, who seemed a potential successor to the premiership, became foreign secretary in Lloyd George's new administration, but not in the small War Cabinet, and was frequently left out of inner workings of government. Balfour's service as foreign secretary was notable for the Balfour Mission, a crucial alliance-building visit to the US in April 1917, and the Balfour Declaration of 1917, a letter to Lord Rothschild affirming the government's support for the establishment of a "national home for the Jewish people" in Palestine, then part of the Ottoman Empire.[49]

Balfour resigned as foreign secretary following the Versailles Conference in 1919, but continued in the government (and the Cabinet after normal peacetime political arrangements resumed) as Lord President of the Council. In 1921–22 he represented the British Empire at the Washington Naval Conference and during summer 1922 stood in for the foreign secretary, Lord Curzon, who was ill. He put forward a proposal for the international settlement of war debts and reparations (the Balfour Note), but it was not accepted.[15]

On 5 May 1922, Balfour was created Earl of Balfour and Viscount Traprain, of Whittingehame, in the county of Haddington.[50] In October 1922 he, with most of the Conservative leadership, resigned with Lloyd George's government following the Carlton Club meeting, a Conservative back-bench revolt against continuance of the coalition. Bonar Law became prime minister. Like many Coalition leaders, he did not hold office in the Conservative governments of 1922–1924, but as an elder statesman, he was consulted by the King in the choice of Stanley Baldwin as Bonar Law's successor as Conservative leader in May 1923. His advice was strongly in favour of Baldwin, ostensibly due to Baldwin's being an MP but in reality motivated by his personal dislike of Curzon. Later that evening, he met a mutual friend who asked 'Will dear George be chosen?' to which he replied with "feline Balfourian satisfaction," "No, dear George will not." His hostess replied, "Oh, I am so sorry to hear that. He will be terribly disappointed." Balfour retorted, "Oh, I don't know. After all, even if he has lost the hope of glory he still possesses the means of Grace."[51]

Balfour was not initially included in Baldwin's second government in 1924, but in 1925, he returned to the Cabinet, in place of the late Lord Curzon as Lord President of the Council, until the government ended in 1929. With 28 years of government service, Balfour had one of the longest ministerial careers in modern British politics, second only to Winston Churchill.[52]

Last years edit

 
Balfour in Mandatory Palestine with Vera and Chaim Weizmann, Nahum Sokolow and others in 1925

Lord Balfour had generally good health until 1928 and remained until then a regular tennis player. Four years previously he had been the first president of the International Lawn Tennis Club of Great Britain. At the end of 1928, most of his teeth were removed and he suffered the unremitting circulatory trouble which ended his life. Before that, he had suffered occasional phlebitis and, by late 1929, he was immobilised by it. Following a visit from Chaim Weizmann, Balfour died at his brother Gerald's home, Fishers Hill House in Hook Heath, Woking, where he had lived since January 1929, on 19 March 1930. At his request a public funeral was declined, and he was buried on 22 March beside members of his family at Whittingehame in a Church of Scotland service although he also belonged to the Church of England. By special remainder, his title passed to his brother Gerald.[53]

His obituaries in The Times, The Guardian and the Daily Herald did not mention the declaration for which he is most famous outside Britain.[54]

Personality edit

 
Portrait by Philip de László, 1908

Early in Balfour's career he was thought to be merely amusing himself with politics, and it was regarded as doubtful whether his health could withstand the severity of English winters. He was considered a dilettante by his colleagues; regardless, Lord Salisbury gave increasingly powerful posts in his government to his nephew.[18]

Beatrice Webb wrote in her diary:

A man of extraordinary grace of mind and body, delighting in all that is beautiful and distinguished––music, literature, philosophy, religious feeling and moral disinterestedness, aloof from all the greed and crying of common human nature. But a strange paradox as Prime Minister of a great empire! I doubt whether even foreign affairs interest him. For all economic and social questions I gather he has an utter loathing, while the machinery of government and administration would seem to him a disagreeable irrelevance.[55]

Balfour developed a manner known to friends as the Balfourian manner. Harold Begbie, a journalist, attacked him for what Begbie considered Balfour's self-obsession:

This Balfourian manner...an attitude of mind—an attitude of convinced superiority which insists in the first place on complete detachment from the enthusiasms of the human race, and in the second place on keeping the vulgar world at arm's length....To Mr. Arthur Balfour this studied attitude of aloofness has been fatal, both to his character and to his career. He has said nothing, written nothing, done nothing, which lives in the heart of his countrymen....the charming, gracious, and cultured Mr. Balfour is the most egotistical of men, and a man who would make almost any sacrifice to remain in office.[56]

However, Graham Goodlad argued to the contrary:

Balfour's air of detachment was a pose. He was sincere in his conservatism, mistrusting radical political and social change and believing deeply in the Union with Ireland, the Empire and the superiority of the British race....Those who dismissed him as a languid dilettante were wide of the mark. As Chief Secretary for Ireland from 1887 to 1891 he manifested an unflinching commitment to the maintenance of British authority in the face of popular protest. He combined a strong emphasis on law and order with measures aimed at reforming the landowning system and developing Ireland's backward rural economy.[39]

Churchill compared Balfour to H. H. Asquith: "The difference between Balfour and Asquith is that Arthur is wicked and moral, while Asquith is good and immoral." Balfour said of himself, "I am more or less happy when being praised, not very comfortable when being abused, but I have moments of uneasiness when being explained."[57]

Balfour was interested in the study of dialects and donated money to Joseph Wright's work on The English Dialect Dictionary. Wright wrote in the preface to the first volume that the project would have been "in vain" had he not received the donation from Balfour.[58]

Balfour was into the 1920s a keen player both of lawn tennis and of golf. In the latter sport, he had a handicap of eight at the time he was Prime Minister, he won the Parliamentary Handicap between members of parliament in 1894, 1897 and 1910, and served as captain both of The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews in 1894 and the newly founded Lye club in 1895.[59] Balfour was a patron of Manchester City F.C.[60] He was also a keen motorist and received, as an 80th birthday present, a Rolls-Royce from both Houses of Parliament.[53]

Writings and academic achievements edit

As a philosopher, Balfour formulated the basis for the evolutionary argument against naturalism. Balfour argued the Darwinian premise of selection for reproductive fitness cast doubt on scientific naturalism, because human cognitive facilities that would accurately perceive truth could be less advantageous than adaptation for evolutionarily useful illusions.[61]

As he says:

[There is] no distinction to be drawn between the development of reason and that of any other faculty, physiological or psychical, by which the interests of the individual or the race are promoted. From the humblest form of nervous irritation at the one end of the scale, to the reasoning capacity of the most advanced races at the other, everything without exception (sensation, instinct, desire, volition) has been produced directly or indirectly, by natural causes acting for the most part on strictly utilitarian principles. Convenience, not knowledge, therefore, has been the main end to which this process has tended.

— Arthur Balfour[62]

He was a member of the Society for Psychical Research, a society studying psychic and paranormal phenomena, and was its president from 1892 to 1894.[63] In 1914, he delivered the Gifford Lectures at the University of Glasgow,[64] which formed the basis for his book Theism and Humanism (1915).[65]

Views on race edit

In 1906, during a House of Commons debate, Balfour argued that the disenfranchisement of the blacks in South Africa was not immoral. He said:[66]

We have to face the facts. Men are not born equal, the white and black races are not born with equal capacities: they are born with different capacities which education cannot and will not change.

Political scholar Yousef Munayyer has claimed that Arthur Balfour's antisemitism played a role in the issuance of the Balfour Declaration, citing Balfour's presiding over, as prime minister, the passage of the Aliens Act 1905 that mainly aimed to restrict Jewish immigration to Britain from Eastern Europe.[66] Balfour had written in 1919, in his introduction to Nahum Sokolow's History of Zionism, that the Zionist movement would:[67]

mitigate the age-long miseries created for Western civilization by the presence in its midst of a Body [the Jews] which it too long regarded as alien and even hostile, but which it was equally unable to expel or to absorb.

Artistic edit

 
Portrait by Walter Stoneman, 1921

After the First World War, when there was controversy over the style of headstone proposed for use on British war graves being taken on by the Imperial War Graves Commission, Balfour submitted a design for a cruciform headstone.[68] At an exhibition in August 1919, it drew many criticisms; the commission's principal architect, Sir John Burnet said that Balfour's cross, if used in large numbers in cemeteries, would create a criss-cross visual effect, destroying any sense of "restful diginity"; Edwin Lutyens called it "extraordinarily ugly", and its shape was variously described as resembling a shooting target or bottle.[68] His design was not accepted but the Commission offered him a second chance to submit another design which he did not take up, having been refused once.[68]: 49  After a further exhibition in the House of Commons, the "Balfour cross" was ultimately rejected in favour of the standard headstone the Commission permanently adopted because the latter offered more space for inscriptions and service emblems.[68]: 50 

Popular culture edit

Balfour occasionally appears in popular culture.[36]

Legacy edit

Balfour's premiership from July 1902 to December 1905 is unusual among modern prime ministers because it did not mark the culmination of his political career. Instead, it was merely an episode in a long life of public service, and he quickly recovered from the setbacks of his chequered premiership. He continued to serve in government for nearly a quarter of a century after leaving 10 Downing Street, despite being forced from the leadership of his party.[71]

Balfour's reputation among historians is mixed. There is agreement about his achievements, as represented by G. M. Trevelyan:

As the prime author of the Education Act, the Licensing Act, Irish Land Purchase and the Committee of Imperial Defence, Balfour has a strong claim to be numbered among the successful Prime Ministers.[72]

But Trevelyan admits that, "owing to the portentous character of the electoral catastrophe of 1906 that claim is not always been allowed; yet Balfour had done great things on his own initiative and by his own strength of character."[73] John L. Gordon pays more attention to the defeats he suffered, stating:

Although Balfour's achievements during his brief prime ministry are noteworthy... he is usually seen as an ineffective leader. He was unable to prevent a split in his party over trade policy, and the Unionist-Conservatives suffered a massive defeat in the election of January 1906. Failing to lead his party to victory in the two general elections of 1910, he resigned as leader in 1911.[74]

Memorials edit

 
1967 Israel stamp commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Balfour Declaration

Balfouria, a moshav in northern Israel, along with many streets in Israel, are named after him. The town of Balfour in Mpumalanga, South Africa, was named after him.[75] A portrait of Balfour by Philip de Laszlo is in the collection of Trinity College, Cambridge.[76]

The Lord Balfour Hotel, an Art Deco hotel on Ocean Drive in the South Beach neighbourhood of Miami Beach, Florida, is named after him.

Honours and decorations edit

He was given the Freedom of the City/Freedom of the Borough of the following:

Honorary degrees edit

Honorary degrees conferred on Arthur Balfour, by country
Country Date School Degree
  England 1909 University of Liverpool Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[85]
  England 1912 University of Sheffield Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[86]
  Canada 1917 University of Toronto Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[87]
  Wales 1921 University of Wales Doctor of Letters (D.Litt.)[citation needed]
  England 1924 University of Leeds Doctor of Laws (LL.D)[88]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 27 June 2015.
  2. ^ Taylor, Simon; Márkus, Gilbert (2008). The Place-Names of Fife. Vol. Two: Central Fife between the Rivers Leven and Eden. Donington. p. 408.
  3. ^ "Balfour". Fife Place-name Data. Glasgow University. n.d. Retrieved 4 July 2019.
  4. ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 250.
  5. ^ a b Tuchman, Barbara (1966). The Proud Tower. Macmillan. p. 46.
  6. ^ "Balfour, Arthur (BLFR866AJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  7. ^ a b c "Obituary: Lord Balfour". The Times. No. 45467. London. 21 March 1930. p. 14.
  8. ^ www.burkespeerage.com
  9. ^ a b c Adams, Ralph James Q. (2007). Balfour: The Last Grandee. John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-5424-7.
  10. ^ Oppenheim, Janet (1988). The Other World: Spiritualism and Psychical Research in England, 1850–1914. Cambridge University Press. pp. 132–133. ISBN 978-0-521-34767-9.
  11. ^ a b Wilson, A. N. (2011). The Victorians. Random House. p. 530. ISBN 978-1-4464-9320-5.
  12. ^ Sargent, John Singer (February 2010) [1899]. "The Wyndham Sisters: Lady Elcho, Mrs. Adeane, and Mrs. Tennant". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 4 June 2012.
  13. ^ Mackay, Ruddock F. (1985). Balfour, Intellectual Statesman. Oxford University Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-19-212245-2.
  14. ^ Chisholm 1911, pp. 250–251.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Zebel, Sydney Henry (1973). Balfour: A Political Biography. Cambridge: University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-08536-6.
  16. ^ Green, Ewen (2006). Balfour. Haus Publishing. pp. 22–. ISBN 978-1-912208-37-1.
  17. ^ Peter Davis, "The Liberal Unionist party and the Irish policy of Lord Salisbury's government, 1886–1892." Historical Journal 18.1 (1975): 85-104.
  18. ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911, p. 251.
  19. ^ Comerford, R. V. (1976). "Chapter III The Parnell era, 1883–91". In Vaughan, W. E. (ed.). Ireland Under the Union, 1870–1921. A New History of Ireland. Vol. 3. Oxford University Press. pp. 71–72. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199583744.003.0003. ISBN 978-0-19-958374-4.
  20. ^ O'Brien, Joseph V. (1976). William O'Brien and the Course of Irish Politics, 1881–1918. University of California Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-520-02886-9.
  21. ^ Massie, Robert (1991). Dreadnought. New York: Random House. pp. 318–319..
  22. ^ Catherine B. Shannon, Arthur J. Balfour and Ireland, 1874–1922 (1988) pp 281–288.
  23. ^ Zebel, 60-77.
  24. ^ Lawrence J. McCaffrey, The Irish Question 1800–1922 (1968) pp 129–133, 167.
  25. ^ L. P. Curtis, Jr., Coercion and Conciliation in Ireland 1880-1892 (1963) pp 424-434. online
  26. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 252.
  27. ^ Viorst, Milton (2016). Zionism: The Birth and Transformation of an Ideal. Macmillan. p. 80. ISBN 978-1-4668-9032-9.
  28. ^ Sand, Shlomo (2012). The Invention of the Land of Israel: From Holy Land to Homeland. London: Verso. pp. 14–15.
  29. ^ Sabbagh, Karl (2006). Palestine : a personal history. London: Atlantic. p. 103. ISBN 978-1-84354-344-2. Balfour warned the House of Commons in his speech of 'the undoubted evils that had fallen upon the country from an immigration which was largely Jewish'
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  32. ^ Robinson, Wendy (2002). "Historiographical reflections on the 1902 Education Act". Oxford Review of Education. 28 (2–3): 159–172. doi:10.1080/03054980220143342. JSTOR 1050905. S2CID 144042590.
  33. ^ Bull, Philip (2016). "The significance of the nationalist response to the Irish land act of 1903". Irish Historical Studies. 28 (111): 283–305. doi:10.1017/S0021121400011056. ISSN 0021-1214. S2CID 159230052.
  34. ^ Bastable, Charles F. (1903). "The Irish Land Purchase Act of 1903". Quarterly Journal of Economics. 18 (1): 1–21. doi:10.2307/1882773. JSTOR 1882773.
  35. ^ Jennings, Paul (2009). "Liquor licensing and the local historian: the 1904 Licensing Act and its administration" (PDF). The Local Historian. 9 (1): 24–37.[permanent dead link]
  36. ^ a b c Rasor, Eugene L. (1998). Arthur James Balfour, 1848-1930: Historiography and Annotated Bibliography. Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-313-28877-7.
  37. ^ Lee, J. J. (1989). Ireland 1912-1985: politics and society. p. 71.
  38. ^ Spencer, Scott C. (2014). "'British Liberty Stained:' Chinese Slavery, Imperial Rhetoric, and the 1906 British General Election". Madison Historical Review. 7 (1): 3–.
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  49. ^ Schneer, Jonathan (2010). The Balfour Declaration: the origins of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Bond Street Books.
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  61. ^ Gray, John (2011). The Immortalization Commission. Doubleday Canada. ISBN 978-0-385-66789-0.
  62. ^ Balfour 1915, p. 68.
  63. ^ Lycett, Andrew (2008). The Man Who Created Sherlock Holmes. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 427. ISBN 978-0-7432-7525-5.
  64. ^ Theism and Humanism: Being the Gifford Lectures Delivered at the University of Glasgow, 1914. Hodder and Stoughton, George H. Doran Company. 1915.
  65. ^ Madigan, Tim (2010). "The Paradoxes of Arthur Balfour". Philosophy Now.
  66. ^ a b "It's Time To Admit That Arthur Balfour Was A White Supremacist — And An Anti-Semite Too". Yousef Munayyer. Palestine Studies. 1 November 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2023.
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  73. ^ Trevelyan, (1937) p 432.
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Sources edit

  • Adams, R.J.Q. (2002). Ramsden, John (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century British Politics.
  • Cannon, John; Crowcroft, Robert, eds. (2015). A Dictionary of British History (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press.
  • Torrance, David, The Scottish Secretaries (Birlinn Limited 2006)
  • Chisholm, Hugh (1911). "Balfour, Arthur James" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 250–254. This article was written by Chisholm himself soon after Balfour's premiership, while he was still leader of the Opposition. It includes a significant amount of contemporaneous analysis, some of which is summarised here.

Further reading edit

Biographical edit

  • Adams, R. J. Q.: Balfour: The Last Grandee, John Murray, 2007) excerpt
  • Alderson, Bernard. Arthur James Balfour, the Man and his Work (1903) online
  • Brendon, Piers: Eminent Edwardians (1980) ch 2
  • Buckle, George Earle (1922). "Balfour, Arthur James" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 30 (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company. pp. 366–368.
  • Dugdale, Blanche: Arthur James Balfour, First Earl of Balfour KG, OM, FRS- Volume 1, (1936); Arthur James Balfour, First Earl of Balfour KG, OM, FRS- Volume 2- 1906–1930, (1936), official life by his niece; vol 1 and 2 online
  • Eccleshall, Robert, and Graham Walker, eds. Biographical Dictionary of British Prime Ministers (1998) pp. 231–238. online
  • Egremont, Max: Balfour: A Life of Arthur James Balfour, William Collins and Company Ltd, 1980
  • Green, E. H. H. Balfour(Haus, 2006). ISBN 978-1-904950-55-4
  • Mackay, Ruddock F.: Balfour, Intellectual Statesman (Oxford 1985) ISBN 978-0-19-212245-2 online
  • Mackay, Ruddock F., and H. C. G. Matthew. "Balfour, Arthur James, first Earl of Balfour (1848–1930)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2011 accessed 19 Nov 2016 18,000 word scholarly biography
  • Pearce, Robert and Graham Goodlad. British Prime Ministers From Balfour to Brown (2013) pp 1–11.
  • Raymond, E. T. (1920). A Life of Arthur James Balfour. Little, Brown.
  • Young, Kenneth: Arthur James Balfour: The Happy Life of the Politician, Prime Minister, Statesman and Philosopher- 1848–1930, G. Bell and Sons, 1963 online
  • Zebel, Sydney Henry. Balfour: A Political Biography (ICON Group International, 1973) online

Specialty studies edit

  • Curtis, Lewis Perry. Coercion and Conciliation in Ireland 1880-1892 (1963) online
  • Davis, Peter. "The Liberal Unionist party and the Irish policy of Lord Salisbury's government, 1886–1892." Historical Journal 18.1 (1975): 85–104. online
  • Dutton, David. His Majesty's Loyal Opposition: the Unionist Party in Opposition 1905-1915 (Liverpool UP, 1992).
  • Ellenberger, Nancy W. Balfour's World: Aristocracy and Political Culture at the Fin de Siècle (2015). excerpt
  • Gollin, Alfred M. Balfour's burden: Arthur Balfour and imperial preference(1965).
  • Green, E.H.H. The Crisis of Conservatism: the politics, economics and ideology of the British Conservative Party, 1880-1914 (Routledge, 1995)
  • Halévy, Élie (1926) Imperialism And The Rise Of Labour (1926) online
  • Halévy, Élie (1956) A History Of The English People: Epilogue vol 1: 1895-1905 (1929) online as prime minister pp 131ff,.
  • Jacyna, Leon Stephen. "Science and social order in the thought of A.J. Balfour." Isis (1980): 11–34. in JSTOR
  • Judd, Denis. Balfour and the British Empire: a study in Imperial evolution 1874–1932 (1968). online
  • Marriott, J. A. R. Modern England, 1885–1945 (1948), pp. 180–99, on Balfour as Prime Minister. online
  • Massie, Robert K. Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and the Coming of the Great War (1992) pp 310–519, a popular account of Balfour's foreign and naval policies as prime minister.
  • Mathew, William M. "The Balfour Declaration and the Palestine Mandate, 1917–1923: British Imperialist Imperatives." British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 40.3 (2013): 231–250.
  • O'Callaghan, Margaret. British high politics and a nationalist Ireland: criminality, land and the law under Forster and Balfour (Cork Univ Pr, 1994).
  • Ramsden, John. A History of the Conservative Party: The age of Balfour and Baldwin, 1902–1940 (1978); vol 3 of a scholarly history of the Conservative Party.
  • Rempel, Richard A. Unionists Divided; Arthur Balfour, Joseph Chamberlain and the Unionist Free Traders (1972).
  • Rofe, J. Simon, and Alan Tomlinson. "Strenuous competition on the field of play, diplomacy off it: the 1908 London Olympics, Theodore Roosevelt and Arthur Balfour, and transatlantic relations." Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 15.1 (2016): 60–79. online
  • Shannon, Catherine B. "The Legacy of Arthur Balfour to Twentieth-Century Ireland." in Peter Collins, ed. Nationalism and Unionism (1994): 17–34.
  • Shannon, Catherine B. Arthur J. Balfour and Ireland, 1874–1922 (Catholic Univ of America Press, 1988) online.
  • Sugawara, Takeshi. "Arthur Balfour and the Japanese Military Assistance during the Great War." International Relations 2012.168 (2012): pp 44–57. online
  • Taylor, Tony. "Arthur Balfour and educational change: The myth revisited." British Journal of Educational Studies 42#2 (1994): 133–149.
  • Tomes, Jason. Balfour and foreign policy: the international thought of a conservative statesman (Cambridge University Press, 2002).
  • Tuchman, Barbara W.: The Proud Tower – A Portrait of the World Before the War (1966)
  • Young, John W. "Conservative Leaders, Coalition, and Britain's Decision for War in 1914." Diplomacy & Statecraft (2014) 25#2 pp 214–239.

Historiography edit

  • Loades David, ed. Reader's Guide to British History (2003) 1:122–24; cover major politicians and issues
  • Rasor Eugene L. Arthur James Balfour, 1848–1930: Historiography and Annotated Bibliography (1998)

Primary sources edit

  • Balfour, Arthur James. Criticism and Beauty: A Lecture Rewritten, Being the Romanes Lecture for 1909 (Oxford, 1910) online
  • Cecil, Robert, and Arthur J. Balfour. Salisbury-Balfour Correspondence: Letters Exchanged Between the 3. Marquess of Salisbury and His Nephew Arthur James Balfour; 1869-1892 (Hertfordshire Record Society, 1988).
  • Ridley, Jane, and Clayre Percy, eds. The Letters of Arthur Balfour and Lady Elcho 1885–1917. (Hamish Hamilton, 1992).
  • Short, Wilfrid M., ed. Arthur James Balfour as Philosopher and Thinker: A Collection of the More Important and Interesting Passages in His Non-political Writings, Speeches, and Addresses, 1879-1912 (1912). online

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Arthur Balfour
  • on the Downing Street website.
  • Portraits of Arthur James Balfour, 1st Earl of Balfour at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
  • Works by or about Arthur Balfour at Internet Archive
  • Works by Arthur Balfour at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Spikily, Samir: Balfour, Arthur James Balfour, Earl of, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
Political offices
Preceded by President of the Local Government Board
1885–1886
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary for Scotland
1886–1887
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief Secretary for Ireland
1887–1891
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Lord of the Treasury
1891–1892
Succeeded by
Leader of the House of Commons
Preceded by First Lord of the Treasury
1895–1905
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the House of Commons
Preceded by Lord Privy Seal
1902–1903
Succeeded by
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
12 July 1902 – 4 December 1905
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Opposition
1905–1911
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Lord of the Admiralty
1915–1916
Succeeded by
Preceded by Foreign Secretary
10 December 1916 – 23 October 1919
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord President of the Council
1919–1922
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord President of the Council
1925–1929
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Hertford
1874–1885
Succeeded by
New constituency Member of Parliament for Manchester East
1885–1906
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for the City of London
February 19061922
With: Sir Edward Clarke to June 1906
Sir Frederick Banbury from June 1906
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Conservative Leader in the Commons Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Conservative Party
1902–1911
Academic offices
Preceded by Rector of the University of St Andrews
1886–1889
Succeeded by
Preceded by Rector of the University of Glasgow
1890–1893
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh
1891–1930
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of the University of Cambridge
1919–1930
Succeeded by
New institution Visitor of Girton College, Cambridge
1924–1930
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Earl of Balfour
1922–1930
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time magazine
13 April 1925
Succeeded by
Scottish feudal lordship
Preceded by Lord and Baron of Hailes
1876–1930
Succeeded by

arthur, balfour, this, article, about, politician, steel, manufacturer, baron, riverdale, lord, balfour, redirects, here, titles, peerages, scotland, ireland, united, kingdom, baron, balfour, glenawley, baron, balfour, inchrye, earl, balfour, lord, balfour, bu. This article is about the politician For the steel manufacturer see Arthur Balfour 1st Baron Riverdale Lord Balfour redirects here For the titles in the peerages of Scotland Ireland and the United Kingdom see Baron Balfour of Glenawley Baron Balfour of Inchrye Earl of Balfour and Lord Balfour of Burleigh Arthur James Balfour 1st Earl of Balfour KG OM PC FRS FBA DL ˈ b ae l f er f ɔːr 1 traditionally Scottish b el ˈ f ʊer 2 3 25 July 1848 19 March 1930 also known as Lord Balfour was a British statesman and Conservative politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1902 to 1905 As foreign secretary in the Lloyd George ministry he issued the Balfour Declaration of 1917 on behalf of the cabinet which supported a home for the Jewish people in Palestine The Right HonourableThe Earl of BalfourKG OM PC FRS FBA DL1902 portraitPrime Minister of the United KingdomIn office 12 July 1902 4 December 1905MonarchEdward VIIPreceded byThe Marquess of SalisburySucceeded byHenry Campbell BannermanSenior political officesLeader of the OppositionIn office 27 February 1906 13 November 1911MonarchsEdward VIIGeorge VPrime MinisterHenry Campbell Bannerman H H AsquithPreceded byJoseph Chamberlain Commons Leader Succeeded byBonar LawIn office 5 December 1905 8 February 1906MonarchEdward VIIPrime MinisterHenry Campbell BannermanPreceded byHenry Campbell BannermanSucceeded byJoseph Chamberlain Commons Leader Leader of the Conservative PartyIn office 11 July 1902 13 November 1911Preceded byThe Marquess of SalisburySucceeded byBonar LawMinisterial offices 1915 1929Lord President of the CouncilIn office 27 April 1925 4 June 1929Prime MinisterStanley BaldwinPreceded byThe Marquess Curzon of KedlestonSucceeded byThe Lord ParmoorIn office 23 October 1919 19 October 1922Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd GeorgePreceded byThe Earl Curzon of KedlestonSucceeded byThe 4th Marquess of SalisburyForeign SecretaryIn office 10 December 1916 23 October 1919Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd GeorgePreceded byThe Viscount Grey of FallodonSucceeded byThe Earl Curzon of KedlestonFirst Lord of the AdmiraltyIn office 25 May 1915 10 December 1916Prime MinisterH H AsquithDavid Lloyd GeorgePreceded byWinston ChurchillSucceeded byEdward CarsonMinisterial offices 1885 1903Lord Keeper of the Privy SealIn office 11 July 1902 17 October 1903Prime MinisterThe 3rd Marquess of SalisburyPreceded byThe 3rd Marquess of SalisburySucceeded byThe 4th Marquess of SalisburyChief Secretary for IrelandIn office 7 March 1887 9 November 1891Prime MinisterThe 3rd Marquess of SalisburyPreceded byMichael Hicks BeachSucceeded byWilliam JacksonSecretary for ScotlandIn office 5 August 1886 11 March 1887Prime MinisterThe 3rd Marquess of SalisburyPreceded byThe Earl of DalhousieSucceeded byThe Marquess of LothianPresident of the Local Government BoardIn office 24 June 1885 1 February 1886Prime MinisterThe 3rd Marquess of SalisburyPreceded byCharles DilkeSucceeded byJoseph ChamberlainParliamentary officesMember of the House of LordsLord TemporalHereditary peerage 5 May 1922 19 March 1930Preceded byPeerage createdSucceeded byThe 2nd Earl of BalfourMember of Parliamentfor the City of LondonIn office 27 February 1906 5 May 1922Preceded byAlban GibbsSucceeded byEdward GrenfellMember of Parliamentfor Manchester EastIn office 18 December 1885 8 January 1906Preceded byConstituency createdSucceeded byThomas HorridgeMember of Parliamentfor HertfordIn office 17 February 1874 18 November 1885Preceded byRobert DimsdaleSucceeded byConstituency abolishedPersonal detailsBornArthur James Balfour 1848 07 25 25 July 1848Whittingehame House East Lothian ScotlandDied19 March 1930 1930 03 19 aged 81 Woking Surrey EnglandResting placeWhittingehame Church WhittingehamePolitical partyConservativeParentJames Maitland Balfour father Alma materTrinity College CambridgeSignatureEntering Parliament in 1874 Balfour achieved prominence as Chief Secretary for Ireland in which position he suppressed agrarian unrest whilst taking measures against absentee landlords He opposed Irish Home Rule saying there could be no half way house between Ireland remaining within the United Kingdom or becoming independent From 1891 he led the Conservative Party in the House of Commons serving under his uncle Lord Salisbury whose government won large majorities in 1895 and 1900 An esteemed debater he was bored by the mundane tasks of party management In July 1902 he succeeded his uncle as prime minister In domestic policy he passed the Land Purchase Ireland Act 1903 which bought out most of the Anglo Irish land owners The Education Act 1902 had a major long term impact in modernising the school system in England and Wales and provided financial support for schools operated by the Church of England and by the Catholic Church Nonconformists were outraged and mobilised their voters but were unable to reverse it In foreign and defence policy he oversaw reform of British defence policy and supported Jackie Fisher s naval innovations He secured the Entente Cordiale with France an alliance that ended centuries of intermittent conflict between the two states and their predecessors He cautiously embraced imperial preference as championed by Joseph Chamberlain but resignations from the Cabinet over the abandonment of free trade left his party divided He also suffered from public anger at the later stages of the Boer War counter insurgency warfare characterised as methods of barbarism and the importation of Chinese labour to South Africa Chinese slavery He resigned as prime minister in December 1905 and the following month the Conservatives suffered a landslide defeat at the 1906 election in which he lost his own seat He soon re entered Parliament and continued to serve as Leader of the Opposition throughout the crisis over Lloyd George s 1909 budget the narrow loss of two further General Elections in 1910 and the passage of the Parliament Act 1911 He resigned as party leader in 1911 Balfour returned as First Lord of the Admiralty in Asquith s Coalition Government 1915 1916 In December 1916 he became foreign secretary in David Lloyd George s coalition He was frequently left out of the inner workings of foreign policy although the Balfour Declaration on a Jewish homeland bore his name He continued to serve in senior positions throughout the 1920s and died in 1930 aged 81 having spent a vast inherited fortune He never married Balfour trained as a philosopher he originated an argument against believing that human reason could determine truth and was seen as having a detached attitude to life epitomised by a remark attributed to him Nothing matters very much and few things matter at all Contents 1 Background and early life 2 Personal life 3 Early career 4 Service in Lord Salisbury s governments 4 1 Irish Secretary 4 2 Leadership roles 5 Prime minister 5 1 Achievements and mistakes 6 Later career 7 Last years 8 Personality 9 Writings and academic achievements 9 1 Views on race 10 Artistic 11 Popular culture 12 Legacy 12 1 Memorials 12 2 Honours and decorations 12 3 Honorary degrees 13 See also 14 References 15 Sources 16 Further reading 16 1 Biographical 16 2 Specialty studies 16 3 Historiography 16 4 Primary sources 17 External linksBackground and early life edit nbsp Whittingehame HouseArthur Balfour was born at Whittingehame House East Lothian Scotland the eldest son of James Maitland Balfour and Lady Blanche Gascoyne Cecil His father was a Scottish MP as was his grandfather James his mother a member of the Cecil family descended from Robert Cecil 1st Earl of Salisbury was the daughter of the 2nd Marquess of Salisbury and a sister of the 3rd Marquess the future prime minister 4 His godfather was the Duke of Wellington after whom he was named 5 He was the eldest son third of eight children and had four brothers and three sisters Arthur Balfour was educated at Grange Preparatory School at Hoddesdon Hertfordshire 1859 1861 and Eton College 1861 1866 where he studied with the influential master William Johnson Cory He then went up to the University of Cambridge where he read moral sciences at Trinity College 1866 1869 6 graduating with a second class honours degree 7 His younger brother was the Cambridge embryologist Francis Maitland Balfour 1851 1882 8 Personal life editBalfour met his cousin May Lyttelton in 1870 when she was 19 After her two previous serious suitors had died Balfour is said to have declared his love for her in December 1874 She died of typhus on Palm Sunday 21 March 1875 Balfour arranged for an emerald ring to be buried in her coffin Lavinia Talbot May s older sister believed that an engagement had been imminent but her recollections of Balfour s distress he was staggered were not written down until thirty years later 9 29 33 Historian R J Q Adams points out that May s letters discuss her love life in detail but contain no evidence that she was in love with Balfour nor that he had spoken to her of marriage He visited her only once during her serious three month illness and was soon accepting social invitations again within a month of her death Adams suggests that although he may simply have been too shy to express his feelings fully Balfour may also have encouraged tales of his youthful tragedy as a convenient cover for his disinclination to marry the matter cannot be conclusively proven 9 29 33 In later years mediums claimed to pass on messages from her see the Cross Correspondences 10 11 Balfour remained a lifelong bachelor Margot Tennant later Margot Asquith wished to marry him but Balfour said No that is not so I rather think of having a career of my own 5 His household was maintained by his also unmarried sister Alice In middle age Balfour had a 40 year friendship with Mary Charteris nee Wyndham Lady Elcho later Countess of Wemyss and March 12 Although one biographer writes that it is difficult to say how far the relationship went her letters suggest they may have become lovers in 1887 and may have engaged in sado masochism 9 47 a claim echoed by A N Wilson 11 Another biographer believes they had no direct physical relationship although he dismisses as unlikely suggestions that Balfour was homosexual or in view of a time during the Boer War when he was seen as he replied to a message while drying himself after his bath Lord Beaverbrook s claim that he was a hermaphrodite whom no one saw naked 13 Balfour was a leading member of the social and intellectual group The Souls Early career edit nbsp Balfour early in his careerIn 1874 Balfour was elected Conservative Member of Parliament MP for Hertford until 1885 From 1885 to 1906 he served as the Member of Parliament for Manchester East In spring 1878 he became private secretary to his uncle Lord Salisbury He accompanied Salisbury then foreign secretary to the Congress of Berlin and gained his first experience in international politics in connection with the settlement of the Russo Turkish conflict At the same time he became known in the world of letters the academic subtlety and literary achievement of his Defence of Philosophic Doubt 1879 suggested he might make a reputation as a philosopher 14 7 Balfour divided his time between politics and academic pursuits Biographer Sydney Zebel suggested that Balfour continued to appear an amateur or dabbler in public affairs devoid of ambition and indifferent to policy issues However in fact he actually made a dramatic transition to a deeply involved politician His assets according to Zebel included a strong ambition that he kept hidden shrewd political judgment a knack for negotiation a taste for intrigue and care to avoid factionalism Most importantly he deepened his close ties with his uncle Lord Salisbury He also maintained cordial relationships with Disraeli Gladstone and other national leaders 15 27 Released from his duties as private secretary by the 1880 general election he began to take more part in parliamentary affairs He was for a time politically associated with Lord Randolph Churchill Sir Henry Drummond Wolff and John Gorst This quartet became known as the Fourth Party and gained notoriety for leader Lord Randolph Churchill s free criticism of Sir Stafford Northcote Lord Cross and other prominent members of the Conservative old gang 15 28 44 16 Service in Lord Salisbury s governments edit nbsp Balfour c 1890Irish Secretary edit In 1885 Lord Salisbury appointed Balfour President of the Local Government Board the following year he became Secretary for Scotland with a seat in the cabinet 17 These offices while offering few opportunities for distinction were an apprenticeship In early 1887 Sir Michael Hicks Beach the Chief Secretary for Ireland resigned because of illness and Salisbury appointed his nephew in his place The selection was much criticized It was received with contemptuous ridicule by the Irish Nationalists for none suspected Balfour s immense strength of will his debating power his ability in attack and his still greater capacity to disregard criticism 18 Balfour surprised critics by ruthless enforcement of the Crimes Act The Mitchelstown Massacre occurred on 9 September 1887 when Royal Irish Constabulary RIC members fired at a crowd protesting against the conviction under the Act of MP William O Brien and another man 19 Three were killed by the RIC s gunfire When Balfour defended the RIC in the Commons O Brien dubbed him Bloody Balfour 20 His steady administration did much to dispel his reputation as a political lightweight 21 In Parliament he resisted overtures to the Irish Parliamentary Party on Home Rule which he saw as an expression of superficial or false Irish nationalism Allied with Joseph Chamberlain s Liberal Unionists he encouraged Unionist activism in Ireland Balfour also helped the poor by creating the Congested Districts Board for Ireland in 1890 Balfour downplayed the factor of Irish nationalism arguing that the real issues were economic Regarding ownership and control of the land he believed that once violence was suppressed and land was sold to the tenants Irish nationalism would no longer threaten the unity of the United Kingdom The slogan to kill home rule with kindness characterized Balfour s new policy toward Ireland 22 The Liberals had begun land sales to Irish tenants with the Land Law Ireland Act 1881 and this was expanded by the Conservatives in the land purchase scheme of 1885 However the depression in agriculture kept prices low Balfour s solution was to keep selling land and in 1887 lowering rents to match the lower prices and protected more tenants against eviction by their landlords 23 Balfour greatly expanded the land sales They culminated in the final Unionist land purchase programme of 1903 when Balfour was prime minister and George Wyndham was the Irish secretary It encouraged landlords to sell by means of a 12 cash bonus Tenants were encouraged to buy with a low interest rate and payments drawn out over 68 years In 1909 Liberal legislation required compulsory sales in certain cases As the landlords sold out they relocated to Great Britain giving up their political power in Ireland Tensions in the countryside dramatically declined as some 200 000 peasant proprietors owned about half the land in Ireland After 1890 violence declined sharply and as Balfour had hoped Irish nationalism was a relatively minor factor The situation suddenly was transformed when the Easter rebellion of 1916 radicalised Ireland 24 25 Leadership roles edit nbsp Balfour in 1891 by Lawrence Alma TademaIn 1886 1892 he became one of the most effective public speakers of the age Impressive in matter rather than delivery his speeches were logical and convincing and delighted an ever wider audience 18 On the death of W H Smith in 1891 Balfour became First Lord of the Treasury the last in British history not to have been concurrently prime minister as well and Leader of the House of Commons After the fall of the government in 1892 he spent three years in opposition When the Conservatives returned to power in coalition with the Liberal Unionists in 1895 Balfour again became Leader of the House and First Lord of the Treasury His management of the abortive education proposals of 1896 showed a disinclination for the drudgery of parliamentary management yet he saw the passage of a bill providing Ireland with improved local government under the Local Government Ireland Act 1898 and joined in debates on foreign and domestic questions between 1895 and 1900 18 During the illness of Lord Salisbury in 1898 and again in Salisbury s absence abroad Balfour was in charge of the Foreign Office and he conducted negotiations with Russia on the question of railways in North China As a member of the cabinet responsible for the Transvaal negotiations in 1899 he bore his share of controversy and when the Second Boer War began disastrously he was first to realise the need to use the country s full military strength His leadership of the House was marked by firmness in the suppression of obstruction yet there was a slight revival of the criticisms of 1896 18 Prime minister editFurther information Balfour ministry With Lord Salisbury s resignation on 11 July 1902 Balfour succeeded him as prime minister with the approval of all the Unionist party The new prime minister came into power practically at the same moment as the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra and the end of the South African War 7 The Liberal party was still disorganised over the Boers 26 In foreign affairs Balfour and his foreign secretary Lord Lansdowne improved relations with France culminating in the Entente Cordiale of 1904 The period also saw the Russo Japanese War when Britain an ally of the Japanese came close to war with Russia after the Dogger Bank incident On the whole Balfour left the conduct of foreign policy to Lansdowne being busy himself with domestic problems 15 Balfour who had known Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann since 1906 opposed Russian mistreatment of Jews and increasingly supported Zionism as a programme for European Jews to settle in Palestine 27 However in 1905 he supported the Aliens Act 1905 one of whose main objectives was to control and restrict Jewish immigration from Eastern Europe 28 29 The budget was certain to show a surplus and taxation could be remitted Yet as events proved it was the budget that would sow dissension override other legislative concerns and signal a new political movement Charles Thomson Ritchie s remission of the shilling import duty on corn led to Joseph Chamberlain s crusade in favour of tariff reform These were taxes on imported goods with trade preference given to the Empire to protect British industry from competition strengthen the Empire in the face of growing German and American economic power and provide revenue other than raising taxes for the social welfare legislation As the session proceeded the rift grew in the Unionist ranks 26 Tariff reform was popular with Unionist supporters but the threat of higher prices for food imports made the policy an electoral albatross Hoping to split the difference between the free traders and tariff reformers in his cabinet and party Balfour favoured retaliatory tariffs to punish others who had tariffs against the British in the hope of encouraging global free trade This was not sufficient for either the free traders or the extreme tariff reformers in government With Balfour s agreement Chamberlain resigned from the Cabinet in late 1903 to campaign for tariff reform At the same time Balfour tried to balance the two factions by accepting the resignation of three free trading ministers including Chancellor Ritchie but the almost simultaneous resignation of the free trader Duke of Devonshire who as Lord Hartington had been the Liberal Unionist leader of the 1880s left Balfour s Cabinet weak By 1905 few Unionist MPs were still free traders Winston Churchill crossed to the Liberals in 1904 when threatened with deselection at Oldham but Balfour s act had drained his authority within the government 15 Balfour resigned as prime minister in December 1905 hoping the Liberal leader Campbell Bannerman would be unable to form a strong government This was dashed when Campbell Bannerman faced down an attempt The Relugas Compact to kick him upstairs to the House of Lords The Conservatives were defeated by the Liberals at the general election the following January in terms of MPs a Liberal landslide with Balfour losing his seat at Manchester East to Thomas Gardner Horridge a solicitor and King s Counsel Only 157 Conservatives were returned to the Commons at least two thirds followers of Chamberlain who chaired the Conservative MPs until Balfour won a by election for a safe seat in the City of London 30 Achievements and mistakes edit According to historian Robert Ensor Balfour can be credited with achievement in five major areas 31 355 The Education Act 1902 and a similar measure for London in 1903 32 The Land Purchase Ireland Act 1903 which bought out the Anglo Irish land owners 33 34 The Licensing Act 1904 35 In military policy the creation of the Committee of Imperial Defence 1904 and support for Sir John Fisher s naval reforms In foreign policy the Anglo French Convention 1904 which formed the basis of the Entente Cordiale with France The Education Act lasted four decades and eventually was highly praised Eugene Rasor states Balfour was credited and much praised from many perspectives with the success of the 1902 education act His commitment to education was fundamental and strong 36 20 At the time it hurt Balfour because the Liberal party used it to rally their Noncomformist supporters Ensor said the Act ranked among the two or three greatest constructive measures of the twentieth century He did not write it but no statesman less dominated than Balfour was by the concept of national efficiency would have taken it up and carried it through since its cost on the side of votes was obvious and deterrent Public money was thus made available for the first time to ensure properly paid teachers and a standardized level of efficiency for all children alike including the Anglican and Catholic schools 31 355 56 For most of the 19th century the very powerful political and economic position of the Church of Ireland Anglican landowners opposed the political aspirations of Irish nationalists Balfour s solution was to buy them out not by compulsion but by offering the owners a full immediate payment and a 12 bonus on the sales price The British government purchased 13 million acres 53 000 km2 by 1920 and sold farms to the tenants at low payments spread over seven decades It would cost money but all sides proved amenable 31 358 60 Starting in 1923 the Irish government bought out most of the remaining landowners and in 1933 diverted payments being made to the British treasury and used them for local improvements 37 Balfour s introduction of Chinese coolie labour in South Africa enabled the Liberals to counterattack charging that his measures amounted to Chinese slavery 31 355 376 78 38 Likerwise Liberals energized the Nonconformists when they attacked Balfour s Licensing Act 1904 which paid pub owners to close down In the long run it did reduce the great oversupply of pubs while in the short run Balfour s party was hurt 31 360 61 Balfour failed to solve his greatest political challenge the debate over tariffs that ripped his party apart Chamberlain proposed to turn the Empire into a closed trade bloc protected by high tariffs against imports from Germany and the United States He argued that tariff reform would revive a flagging British economy strengthen imperial ties with the dominions and the colonies and produce a positive programme that would facilitate reelection He was vehemently opposed by Conservative free traders who denounced the proposal as economically fallacious and open to the charge of raising food prices in Britain Balfour tried to forestall disruption by removing key ministers on each side and offering a much narrower tariff programme It was ingenious but both sides rejected any compromise and his party s chances for reelection were ruined 39 40 4 6 Historians generally praised Balfour s achievements in military and foreign policy Cannon amp Crowcroft 2015 stress the importance of the Anglo French Entente of 1904 and the establishment of the Committee of Imperial Defence 41 Rasor points to twelve historians who have examined his key role in naval and military reforms 36 39 40 31 361 71 However there was little political payback at the time The local Conservative campaigns in 1906 focused mostly on a few domestic issues 42 Balfour gave strong support for Jackie Fisher s naval reforms 43 Balfour created and chaired the Committee of Imperial Defence which provided better long term coordinated planning between the Army and Navy 44 Austen Chamberlain said Britain would have been unprepared for the First World War without his Committee of Imperial Defence He wrote It is impossible to overrate the services thus rendered by Balfour to the Country and Empire Without the CID victory would have been impossible 45 Historians also praised the Anglo French Convention 1904 which formed the basis of the Entente Cordiale with France that proved decisive in 1914 46 Balfour may have been personally sympathetic to extending suffrage with his brother Gerald Conservative MP for Leeds Central married to women s suffrage activist Constance Lytton s sister Betty 47 but he accepted the strength of the political opposition to women s suffrage as shown in correspondence with Christabel Pankhurst a leader of the WSPU Balfour argued that he was not convinced the majority of women actually wanted the vote in 1907 A rebuttal which meant extending the activist campaign for women s rights 47 He was reminded by Lytton of a speech he made in 1892 namely that this question will arise again menacing and ripe for resolution she asked him to meet WSPU leader Christabel Pankhurst after a series of hunger strikes and suffering by imprisoned suffragettes in 1907 Balfour refused on the grounds of her militancy 47 Christabel pleaded direct to meet Balfour as Conservative party leader on their policy manifesto for the General Election of 1909 dubious discuss but he refused again as women s suffrage was not a party question and his colleagues were divided on the matter 47 She tried and failed again to get his open support in parliament for women s cause in the 1910 private member s Conciliation Bill 47 He voted for the bill in the end but not for its progress to the Grand Committee preventing it becoming law and extending the activist campaigns as a result again 47 The following year Lytton and Annie Kenney in person after another reading of the Bill but again it was not prioritised as government business 47 His sister in law Lady Betty Balfour spoke to Churchill that her brother was to speak for this policy and also met the Prime Minister H H Asquith in a 1911 delegation of the women s movements representing the Conservative and Unionist Women s Franchise Association 47 but it was not until 1918 that some women were given the right to vote in elections in the United Kingdom despite a forty year campaign 47 Later career edit nbsp Painting by John Singer Sargent 1908 nbsp Balfour caricatured by Vanity Fair 1910 nbsp Balfour and Winston Churchill in 1911After the general election of 1906 Balfour remained party leader his position strengthened by Joseph Chamberlain s absence from the House of Commons after his stroke in July 1906 but he was unable to make much headway against the huge Liberal majority in the Commons An early attempt to score a debating triumph over the government made in Balfour s usual abstruse theoretical style saw Campbell Bannerman respond with Enough of this foolery to the delight of his supporters Balfour made the controversial decision with Lord Lansdowne to use the heavily Unionist House of Lords as a check on the political programme and legislation of the Liberal party in the Commons Legislation was vetoed or altered by amendments between 1906 and 1909 leading David Lloyd George to remark that the Lords was the right hon Gentleman s poodle It fetches and carries for him It barks for him It bites anybody that he sets it on to And we are told that this is a great revising Chamber the safeguard of liberty in the country 48 The issue was forced by the Liberals with Lloyd George s People s Budget provoking the constitutional crisis that led to the Parliament Act 1911 which limited the Lords to delaying bills for up to two years After the Unionists lost the general elections of 1910 despite softening the tariff reform policy with Balfour s promise of a referendum on food taxes the Unionist peers split to allow the Parliament Act to pass the House of Lords to prevent mass creation of Liberal peers by the new King George V The exhausted Balfour resigned as party leader after the crisis and was succeeded in late 1911 by Bonar Law 15 Balfour remained important in the party however and when the Unionists joined Asquith s coalition government in May 1915 Balfour succeeded Churchill as First Lord of the Admiralty When Asquith s government collapsed in December 1916 Balfour who seemed a potential successor to the premiership became foreign secretary in Lloyd George s new administration but not in the small War Cabinet and was frequently left out of inner workings of government Balfour s service as foreign secretary was notable for the Balfour Mission a crucial alliance building visit to the US in April 1917 and the Balfour Declaration of 1917 a letter to Lord Rothschild affirming the government s support for the establishment of a national home for the Jewish people in Palestine then part of the Ottoman Empire 49 Balfour resigned as foreign secretary following the Versailles Conference in 1919 but continued in the government and the Cabinet after normal peacetime political arrangements resumed as Lord President of the Council In 1921 22 he represented the British Empire at the Washington Naval Conference and during summer 1922 stood in for the foreign secretary Lord Curzon who was ill He put forward a proposal for the international settlement of war debts and reparations the Balfour Note but it was not accepted 15 On 5 May 1922 Balfour was created Earl of Balfour and Viscount Traprain of Whittingehame in the county of Haddington 50 In October 1922 he with most of the Conservative leadership resigned with Lloyd George s government following the Carlton Club meeting a Conservative back bench revolt against continuance of the coalition Bonar Law became prime minister Like many Coalition leaders he did not hold office in the Conservative governments of 1922 1924 but as an elder statesman he was consulted by the King in the choice of Stanley Baldwin as Bonar Law s successor as Conservative leader in May 1923 His advice was strongly in favour of Baldwin ostensibly due to Baldwin s being an MP but in reality motivated by his personal dislike of Curzon Later that evening he met a mutual friend who asked Will dear George be chosen to which he replied with feline Balfourian satisfaction No dear George will not His hostess replied Oh I am so sorry to hear that He will be terribly disappointed Balfour retorted Oh I don t know After all even if he has lost the hope of glory he still possesses the means of Grace 51 Balfour was not initially included in Baldwin s second government in 1924 but in 1925 he returned to the Cabinet in place of the late Lord Curzon as Lord President of the Council until the government ended in 1929 With 28 years of government service Balfour had one of the longest ministerial careers in modern British politics second only to Winston Churchill 52 Last years edit nbsp Balfour in Mandatory Palestine with Vera and Chaim Weizmann Nahum Sokolow and others in 1925Lord Balfour had generally good health until 1928 and remained until then a regular tennis player Four years previously he had been the first president of the International Lawn Tennis Club of Great Britain At the end of 1928 most of his teeth were removed and he suffered the unremitting circulatory trouble which ended his life Before that he had suffered occasional phlebitis and by late 1929 he was immobilised by it Following a visit from Chaim Weizmann Balfour died at his brother Gerald s home Fishers Hill House in Hook Heath Woking where he had lived since January 1929 on 19 March 1930 At his request a public funeral was declined and he was buried on 22 March beside members of his family at Whittingehame in a Church of Scotland service although he also belonged to the Church of England By special remainder his title passed to his brother Gerald 53 His obituaries in The Times The Guardian and the Daily Herald did not mention the declaration for which he is most famous outside Britain 54 Personality edit nbsp Portrait by Philip de Laszlo 1908Early in Balfour s career he was thought to be merely amusing himself with politics and it was regarded as doubtful whether his health could withstand the severity of English winters He was considered a dilettante by his colleagues regardless Lord Salisbury gave increasingly powerful posts in his government to his nephew 18 Beatrice Webb wrote in her diary A man of extraordinary grace of mind and body delighting in all that is beautiful and distinguished music literature philosophy religious feeling and moral disinterestedness aloof from all the greed and crying of common human nature But a strange paradox as Prime Minister of a great empire I doubt whether even foreign affairs interest him For all economic and social questions I gather he has an utter loathing while the machinery of government and administration would seem to him a disagreeable irrelevance 55 Balfour developed a manner known to friends as the Balfourian manner Harold Begbie a journalist attacked him for what Begbie considered Balfour s self obsession This Balfourian manner an attitude of mind an attitude of convinced superiority which insists in the first place on complete detachment from the enthusiasms of the human race and in the second place on keeping the vulgar world at arm s length To Mr Arthur Balfour this studied attitude of aloofness has been fatal both to his character and to his career He has said nothing written nothing done nothing which lives in the heart of his countrymen the charming gracious and cultured Mr Balfour is the most egotistical of men and a man who would make almost any sacrifice to remain in office 56 However Graham Goodlad argued to the contrary Balfour s air of detachment was a pose He was sincere in his conservatism mistrusting radical political and social change and believing deeply in the Union with Ireland the Empire and the superiority of the British race Those who dismissed him as a languid dilettante were wide of the mark As Chief Secretary for Ireland from 1887 to 1891 he manifested an unflinching commitment to the maintenance of British authority in the face of popular protest He combined a strong emphasis on law and order with measures aimed at reforming the landowning system and developing Ireland s backward rural economy 39 Churchill compared Balfour to H H Asquith The difference between Balfour and Asquith is that Arthur is wicked and moral while Asquith is good and immoral Balfour said of himself I am more or less happy when being praised not very comfortable when being abused but I have moments of uneasiness when being explained 57 Balfour was interested in the study of dialects and donated money to Joseph Wright s work on The English Dialect Dictionary Wright wrote in the preface to the first volume that the project would have been in vain had he not received the donation from Balfour 58 Balfour was into the 1920s a keen player both of lawn tennis and of golf In the latter sport he had a handicap of eight at the time he was Prime Minister he won the Parliamentary Handicap between members of parliament in 1894 1897 and 1910 and served as captain both of The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews in 1894 and the newly founded Lye club in 1895 59 Balfour was a patron of Manchester City F C 60 He was also a keen motorist and received as an 80th birthday present a Rolls Royce from both Houses of Parliament 53 Writings and academic achievements editAs a philosopher Balfour formulated the basis for the evolutionary argument against naturalism Balfour argued the Darwinian premise of selection for reproductive fitness cast doubt on scientific naturalism because human cognitive facilities that would accurately perceive truth could be less advantageous than adaptation for evolutionarily useful illusions 61 As he says There is no distinction to be drawn between the development of reason and that of any other faculty physiological or psychical by which the interests of the individual or the race are promoted From the humblest form of nervous irritation at the one end of the scale to the reasoning capacity of the most advanced races at the other everything without exception sensation instinct desire volition has been produced directly or indirectly by natural causes acting for the most part on strictly utilitarian principles Convenience not knowledge therefore has been the main end to which this process has tended Arthur Balfour 62 He was a member of the Society for Psychical Research a society studying psychic and paranormal phenomena and was its president from 1892 to 1894 63 In 1914 he delivered the Gifford Lectures at the University of Glasgow 64 which formed the basis for his book Theism and Humanism 1915 65 Views on race edit In 1906 during a House of Commons debate Balfour argued that the disenfranchisement of the blacks in South Africa was not immoral He said 66 We have to face the facts Men are not born equal the white and black races are not born with equal capacities they are born with different capacities which education cannot and will not change Political scholar Yousef Munayyer has claimed that Arthur Balfour s antisemitism played a role in the issuance of the Balfour Declaration citing Balfour s presiding over as prime minister the passage of the Aliens Act 1905 that mainly aimed to restrict Jewish immigration to Britain from Eastern Europe 66 Balfour had written in 1919 in his introduction to Nahum Sokolow s History of Zionism that the Zionist movement would 67 mitigate the age long miseries created for Western civilization by the presence in its midst of a Body the Jews which it too long regarded as alien and even hostile but which it was equally unable to expel or to absorb Artistic edit nbsp Portrait by Walter Stoneman 1921After the First World War when there was controversy over the style of headstone proposed for use on British war graves being taken on by the Imperial War Graves Commission Balfour submitted a design for a cruciform headstone 68 At an exhibition in August 1919 it drew many criticisms the commission s principal architect Sir John Burnet said that Balfour s cross if used in large numbers in cemeteries would create a criss cross visual effect destroying any sense of restful diginity Edwin Lutyens called it extraordinarily ugly and its shape was variously described as resembling a shooting target or bottle 68 His design was not accepted but the Commission offered him a second chance to submit another design which he did not take up having been refused once 68 49 After a further exhibition in the House of Commons the Balfour cross was ultimately rejected in favour of the standard headstone the Commission permanently adopted because the latter offered more space for inscriptions and service emblems 68 50 Popular culture editBalfour occasionally appears in popular culture 36 Balfour was the subject of two parody novels based on Alice in Wonderland Clara in Blunderland 1902 and Lost in Blunderland 1903 which appeared under the pseudonym Caroline Lewis one of the co authors was Harold Begbie 69 70 The character Arthur Balfour plays a supporting off screen role in Upstairs Downstairs promoting the family patriarch Richard Bellamy to the position of Civil Lord of the Admiralty Balfour was portrayed by Adrian Ropes in the 1974 Thames TV production Jennie Lady Randolph Churchill Balfour was portrayed by Lyndon Brook in the 1975 ATV production Edward the Seventh A fictionalised version of Arthur Balfour identified as Mr Balfour appears as British prime minister in the science fiction romance The Angel of the Revolution by George Griffith published in 1893 when Balfour was still in opposition but set in an imagined near future of 1903 1905 The indecisive Balfour identified as Halfan Halfour appears in Ministers of Grace a satirical short story by Saki in which he and other leading politicians including Quinston are changed into animals appropriate to their characters Legacy editBalfour s premiership from July 1902 to December 1905 is unusual among modern prime ministers because it did not mark the culmination of his political career Instead it was merely an episode in a long life of public service and he quickly recovered from the setbacks of his chequered premiership He continued to serve in government for nearly a quarter of a century after leaving 10 Downing Street despite being forced from the leadership of his party 71 Balfour s reputation among historians is mixed There is agreement about his achievements as represented by G M Trevelyan As the prime author of the Education Act the Licensing Act Irish Land Purchase and the Committee of Imperial Defence Balfour has a strong claim to be numbered among the successful Prime Ministers 72 But Trevelyan admits that owing to the portentous character of the electoral catastrophe of 1906 that claim is not always been allowed yet Balfour had done great things on his own initiative and by his own strength of character 73 John L Gordon pays more attention to the defeats he suffered stating Although Balfour s achievements during his brief prime ministry are noteworthy he is usually seen as an ineffective leader He was unable to prevent a split in his party over trade policy and the Unionist Conservatives suffered a massive defeat in the election of January 1906 Failing to lead his party to victory in the two general elections of 1910 he resigned as leader in 1911 74 Memorials edit nbsp 1967 Israel stamp commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Balfour DeclarationBalfouria a moshav in northern Israel along with many streets in Israel are named after him The town of Balfour in Mpumalanga South Africa was named after him 75 A portrait of Balfour by Philip de Laszlo is in the collection of Trinity College Cambridge 76 The Lord Balfour Hotel an Art Deco hotel on Ocean Drive in the South Beach neighbourhood of Miami Beach Florida is named after him Honours and decorations edit His appointment as a Deputy Lieutenant of Ross shire on 10 September 1880 gave him the post nominal letters DL 77 He was sworn of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom in 1885 giving him the style The Right Honourable and after ennoblement the post nominal letters PC for life 78 On 3 June 1916 he was appointed to the Order of Merit giving him the post nominal letters OM for life 79 He was elected an International Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1902 and an International Member of the American Philosophical Society in 1917 80 81 In 1919 he was elected Chancellor of his old university Cambridge in succession to his brother in law Lord Rayleigh He was made a Knight Companion of the Order of the Garter on 3 March 1922 becoming Sir Arthur Balfour and giving him the post nominal letters KG for life 82 On 5 May 1922 Balfour was raised to the peerage as Earl of Balfour and Viscount Traprain of Whittingehame in the county of Haddington This allowed him to sit in the House of Lords 83 He was awarded the Estonian Cross of Liberty conferred between 1919 and 1925 third grade first class for Civilian Service He was given the Freedom of the City Freedom of the Borough of the following nbsp 28 September 1899 Dundee nbsp 20 September 1902 Haddington East Lothian 84 nbsp 19 October 1905 EdinburghHonorary degrees edit Honorary degrees conferred on Arthur Balfour by country Country Date School Degree nbsp England 1909 University of Liverpool Doctor of Laws LL D 85 nbsp England 1912 University of Sheffield Doctor of Laws LL D 86 nbsp Canada 1917 University of Toronto Doctor of Laws LL D 87 nbsp Wales 1921 University of Wales Doctor of Letters D Litt citation needed nbsp England 1924 University of Leeds Doctor of Laws LL D 88 This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items November 2015 See also editBalfour Declaration Balfour Declaration of 1926 Palm Sunday CaseReferences edit Balfour Arthur James Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 27 June 2015 Taylor Simon Markus Gilbert 2008 The Place Names of Fife Vol Two Central Fife between the Rivers Leven and Eden Donington p 408 Balfour Fife Place name Data Glasgow University n d Retrieved 4 July 2019 Chisholm 1911 p 250 a b Tuchman Barbara 1966 The Proud Tower Macmillan p 46 Balfour Arthur BLFR866AJ A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c Obituary Lord Balfour The Times No 45467 London 21 March 1930 p 14 www burkespeerage com a b c Adams Ralph James Q 2007 Balfour The Last Grandee John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 5424 7 Oppenheim Janet 1988 The Other World Spiritualism and Psychical Research in England 1850 1914 Cambridge University Press pp 132 133 ISBN 978 0 521 34767 9 a b Wilson A N 2011 The Victorians Random House p 530 ISBN 978 1 4464 9320 5 Sargent John Singer February 2010 1899 The Wyndham Sisters Lady Elcho Mrs Adeane and Mrs Tennant The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 4 June 2012 Mackay Ruddock F 1985 Balfour Intellectual Statesman Oxford University Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 19 212245 2 Chisholm 1911 pp 250 251 a b c d e f Zebel Sydney Henry 1973 Balfour A Political Biography Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 08536 6 Green Ewen 2006 Balfour Haus Publishing pp 22 ISBN 978 1 912208 37 1 Peter Davis The Liberal Unionist party and the Irish policy of Lord Salisbury s government 1886 1892 Historical Journal 18 1 1975 85 104 a b c d e Chisholm 1911 p 251 Comerford R V 1976 Chapter III The Parnell era 1883 91 In Vaughan W E ed Ireland Under the Union 1870 1921 A New History of Ireland Vol 3 Oxford University Press pp 71 72 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199583744 003 0003 ISBN 978 0 19 958374 4 O Brien Joseph V 1976 William O Brien and the Course of Irish Politics 1881 1918 University of California Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 520 02886 9 Massie Robert 1991 Dreadnought New York Random House pp 318 319 Catherine B Shannon Arthur J Balfour and Ireland 1874 1922 1988 pp 281 288 Zebel 60 77 Lawrence J McCaffrey The Irish Question 1800 1922 1968 pp 129 133 167 L P Curtis Jr Coercion and Conciliation in Ireland 1880 1892 1963 pp 424 434 online a b Chisholm 1911 p 252 Viorst Milton 2016 Zionism The Birth and Transformation of an Ideal Macmillan p 80 ISBN 978 1 4668 9032 9 Sand Shlomo 2012 The Invention of the Land of Israel From Holy Land to Homeland London Verso pp 14 15 Sabbagh Karl 2006 Palestine a personal history London Atlantic p 103 ISBN 978 1 84354 344 2 Balfour warned the House of Commons in his speech of the undoubted evils that had fallen upon the country from an immigration which was largely Jewish Chisholm 1911 p 254 a b c d e f Ensor R C K 1936 England 1870 1914 Oxford Clarendon Robinson Wendy 2002 Historiographical reflections on the 1902 Education Act Oxford Review of Education 28 2 3 159 172 doi 10 1080 03054980220143342 JSTOR 1050905 S2CID 144042590 Bull Philip 2016 The significance of the nationalist response to the Irish land act of 1903 Irish Historical Studies 28 111 283 305 doi 10 1017 S0021121400011056 ISSN 0021 1214 S2CID 159230052 Bastable Charles F 1903 The Irish Land Purchase Act of 1903 Quarterly Journal of Economics 18 1 1 21 doi 10 2307 1882773 JSTOR 1882773 Jennings Paul 2009 Liquor licensing and the local historian the 1904 Licensing Act and its administration PDF The Local Historian 9 1 24 37 permanent dead link a b c Rasor Eugene L 1998 Arthur James Balfour 1848 1930 Historiography and Annotated Bibliography Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 28877 7 Lee J J 1989 Ireland 1912 1985 politics and society p 71 Spencer Scott C 2014 British Liberty Stained Chinese Slavery Imperial Rhetoric and the 1906 British General Election Madison Historical Review 7 1 3 a b Goodlad Graham 2010 Balfour Graham Goodlad Reviews the Career of AJ Balfour an Unsuccessful Prime Minister and Party Leader but an Important and Long Serving Figure on the British Political Scene History Review 68 22 24 Pearce Robert Goodlad Graham 2013 British Prime Ministers From Balfour to Brown Adams 2002 p 199 Russell A K 1973 Liberal landslide the general election of 1906 p 92 French David 1994 Defending the Empire The Conservative Party and British Defense Policy 1899 1915 English Historical Review 109 434 1324 1326 doi 10 1093 ehr CIX 434 1324 Mackintosh John P 1962 The role of the Committee of Imperial Defence before 1914 English Historical Review 77 304 490 503 doi 10 1093 ehr LXXVII CCCIV 490 JSTOR 561324 Young Kenneth 1975 Arthur James Balfour In Van Thal Herbert ed The Prime Ministers From Sir Robert Walpole to Edward Heath Vol 2 Stein and Day p 173 ISBN 978 0 04 942131 8 MacMillan Margaret 2013 The War that Ended Peace How Europe abandoned peace for the First World War Profile pp 169 171 ISBN 978 1 84765 416 8 a b c d e f g h i Atkinson Diane 2018 Rise up women the remarkable lives of the suffragettes London Bloomsbury pp 8 76 77 137 169 184 201 209 253 267 ISBN 978 1 4088 4404 5 OCLC 1016848621 HC Deb 26 June 1907 vol 176 cc1408 523 Hansard Retrieved 12 May 2019 Schneer Jonathan 2010 The Balfour Declaration the origins of the Arab Israeli conflict Bond Street Books No 32691 The London Gazette 5 May 1922 p 3512 Blake Robert 1997 The Conservative Party from Peel to Major London Arrow p 213 Parkinson Justin 13 June 2013 Chasing Churchill Ken Clarke climbs ministerial long service chart BBC News a b Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Volume 3 Oxford University Press 2004 p 512 ISBN 0 19 861353 9 Article by Ruddock Mackay and H C G Matthew Teveth Shabtai 1985 Ben Gurion and the Palestinian Arabs From Peace to War p 106 MacKenzie Jeanne ed 1983 The Diary of Beatrice Webb Virago p 288 ISBN 978 0 86068 210 3 Begbie Harold 1920 Mirrors of Downing Street pp 76 79 Anon n d History of Arthur James Balfour gov uk Retrieved 4 July 2019 Wright Joseph 1898 The English Dialect Dictionary Volume 1 A C London Henry Frowde p viii Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Volume 3 p 497 Sanders Richard 2010 Beastly Fury The Strange Birth of British Football Bantam Books ISBN 978 0 55381 935 9 p219 Gray John 2011 The Immortalization Commission Doubleday Canada ISBN 978 0 385 66789 0 Balfour 1915 p 68 Lycett Andrew 2008 The Man Who Created Sherlock Holmes New York Simon and Schuster p 427 ISBN 978 0 7432 7525 5 Theism and Humanism Being the Gifford Lectures Delivered at the University of Glasgow 1914 Hodder and Stoughton George H Doran Company 1915 Madigan Tim 2010 The Paradoxes of Arthur Balfour Philosophy Now a b It s Time To Admit That Arthur Balfour Was A White Supremacist And An Anti Semite Too Yousef Munayyer Palestine Studies 1 November 2017 Retrieved 19 April 2023 Michael J Cohen 2014 Britain s Moment in Palestine Retrospect and Perspectives 1917 1948 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 91364 1 Retrieved 21 April 2023 a b c d Longworth Philip 1985 The unending vigil a history of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission 1917 1984 Leo Cooper in association with Secker amp Warburg ISBN 978 0 436 25689 9 Sigler Carolyn ed 1997 Alternative Alices Visions and Revisions of Lewis Carroll s Alice Books Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky pp 340 347 Dickinson Evelyn 20 June 1902 Literary Note and Books of the Month United Australia II 12 Robert Eccleshall and Graham Walker eds Biographical Dictionary of British Prime Ministers 1998 p 231 G M Trevelyan British history in the 19th century and after 1792 1919 1937 p 432 Trevelyan 1937 p 432 John L Gordon Balfour David Loades ed Readers Guide to British History 2003 1 122 124 Raper P E 1989 Dictionary of Southern African Place Names Jonathan Ball Publishers p 68 ISBN 978 0 947464 04 2 via Internet Archive Trinity College University of Cambridge BBC Your Paintings Archived from the original on 11 May 2014 The London Gazette 1880 Retrieved 24 July 2016 The London Gazette 26 June 1885 Retrieved 4 October 2021 The London Gazette 3 June 1916 Retrieved 4 October 2021 Arthur James Balfour American Academy of Arts amp Sciences 9 February 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 16 October 2023 The London Gazette 14 March 1922 Retrieved 4 October 2021 The London Gazette 5 May 1922 Retrieved 4 October 2021 Mr Balfour at Haddington The Times No 36879 London 22 September 1902 p 5 Honorary Graduates of the University PDF University of Liverpool Archived from the original PDF on 7 February 2018 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Honorary Graduates PDF University of Sheffield Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2019 University of Toronto Honorary Degree Recipients 1850 2016 PDF University of Toronto Retrieved 12 May 2019 Honour for Earl of Balfour The Scotsman No 25 446 17 December 1924 p 8 via British Newspaper Archive Sources editAdams R J Q 2002 Ramsden John ed The Oxford Companion to Twentieth Century British Politics Cannon John Crowcroft Robert eds 2015 A Dictionary of British History 3rd ed Oxford University Press Torrance David The Scottish Secretaries Birlinn Limited 2006 Chisholm Hugh 1911 Balfour Arthur James In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 3 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 250 254 This article was written by Chisholm himself soon after Balfour s premiership while he was still leader of the Opposition It includes a significant amount of contemporaneous analysis some of which is summarised here Further reading editBiographical edit Adams R J Q Balfour The Last Grandee John Murray 2007 excerpt Alderson Bernard Arthur James Balfour the Man and his Work 1903 online Brendon Piers Eminent Edwardians 1980 ch 2 Buckle George Earle 1922 Balfour Arthur James In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 30 12th ed London amp New York The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company pp 366 368 Dugdale Blanche Arthur James Balfour First Earl of Balfour KG OM FRS Volume 1 1936 Arthur James Balfour First Earl of Balfour KG OM FRS Volume 2 1906 1930 1936 official life by his niece vol 1 and 2 online Eccleshall Robert and Graham Walker eds Biographical Dictionary of British Prime Ministers 1998 pp 231 238 online Egremont Max Balfour A Life of Arthur James Balfour William Collins and Company Ltd 1980 Green E H H Balfour Haus 2006 ISBN 978 1 904950 55 4 Mackay Ruddock F Balfour Intellectual Statesman Oxford 1985 ISBN 978 0 19 212245 2 online Mackay Ruddock F and H C G Matthew Balfour Arthur James first Earl of Balfour 1848 1930 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Jan 2011 accessed 19 Nov 2016 18 000 word scholarly biography Pearce Robert and Graham Goodlad British Prime Ministers From Balfour to Brown 2013 pp 1 11 Raymond E T 1920 A Life of Arthur James Balfour Little Brown Young Kenneth Arthur James Balfour The Happy Life of the Politician Prime Minister Statesman and Philosopher 1848 1930 G Bell and Sons 1963 online Zebel Sydney Henry Balfour A Political Biography ICON Group International 1973 onlineSpecialty studies edit Curtis Lewis Perry Coercion and Conciliation in Ireland 1880 1892 1963 online Davis Peter The Liberal Unionist party and the Irish policy of Lord Salisbury s government 1886 1892 Historical Journal 18 1 1975 85 104 online Dutton David His Majesty s Loyal Opposition the Unionist Party in Opposition 1905 1915 Liverpool UP 1992 Ellenberger Nancy W Balfour s World Aristocracy and Political Culture at the Fin de Siecle 2015 excerpt Gollin Alfred M Balfour s burden Arthur Balfour and imperial preference 1965 Green E H H The Crisis of Conservatism the politics economics and ideology of the British Conservative Party 1880 1914 Routledge 1995 Halevy Elie 1926 Imperialism And The Rise Of Labour 1926 online Halevy Elie 1956 A History Of The English People Epilogue vol 1 1895 1905 1929 online as prime minister pp 131ff Jacyna Leon Stephen Science and social order in the thought of A J Balfour Isis 1980 11 34 in JSTOR Judd Denis Balfour and the British Empire a study in Imperial evolution 1874 1932 1968 online Marriott J A R Modern England 1885 1945 1948 pp 180 99 on Balfour as Prime Minister online Massie Robert K Dreadnought Britain Germany and the Coming of the Great War 1992 pp 310 519 a popular account of Balfour s foreign and naval policies as prime minister Mathew William M The Balfour Declaration and the Palestine Mandate 1917 1923 British Imperialist Imperatives British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 40 3 2013 231 250 O Callaghan Margaret British high politics and a nationalist Ireland criminality land and the law under Forster and Balfour Cork Univ Pr 1994 Ramsden John A History of the Conservative Party The age of Balfour and Baldwin 1902 1940 1978 vol 3 of a scholarly history of the Conservative Party Rempel Richard A Unionists Divided Arthur Balfour Joseph Chamberlain and the Unionist Free Traders 1972 Rofe J Simon and Alan Tomlinson Strenuous competition on the field of play diplomacy off it the 1908 London Olympics Theodore Roosevelt and Arthur Balfour and transatlantic relations Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 15 1 2016 60 79 online Shannon Catherine B The Legacy of Arthur Balfour to Twentieth Century Ireland in Peter Collins ed Nationalism and Unionism 1994 17 34 Shannon Catherine B Arthur J Balfour and Ireland 1874 1922 Catholic Univ of America Press 1988 online Sugawara Takeshi Arthur Balfour and the Japanese Military Assistance during the Great War International Relations 2012 168 2012 pp 44 57 online Taylor Tony Arthur Balfour and educational change The myth revisited British Journal of Educational Studies 42 2 1994 133 149 Tomes Jason Balfour and foreign policy the international thought of a conservative statesman Cambridge University Press 2002 Tuchman Barbara W The Proud Tower A Portrait of the World Before the War 1966 Young John W Conservative Leaders Coalition and Britain s Decision for War in 1914 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 2014 25 2 pp 214 239 Historiography edit Loades David ed Reader s Guide to British History 2003 1 122 24 cover major politicians and issues Rasor Eugene L Arthur James Balfour 1848 1930 Historiography and Annotated Bibliography 1998 Primary sources edit Balfour Arthur James Criticism and Beauty A Lecture Rewritten Being the Romanes Lecture for 1909 Oxford 1910 online Cecil Robert and Arthur J Balfour Salisbury Balfour Correspondence Letters Exchanged Between the 3 Marquess of Salisbury and His Nephew Arthur James Balfour 1869 1892 Hertfordshire Record Society 1988 Ridley Jane and Clayre Percy eds The Letters of Arthur Balfour and Lady Elcho 1885 1917 Hamish Hamilton 1992 Short Wilfrid M ed Arthur James Balfour as Philosopher and Thinker A Collection of the More Important and Interesting Passages in His Non political Writings Speeches and Addresses 1879 1912 1912 onlineExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arthur Balfour 1st Earl of Balfour nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Arthur Balfour nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Arthur Balfour Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Arthur Balfour More about Arthur James Balfour on the Downing Street website Portraits of Arthur James Balfour 1st Earl of Balfour at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Works by or about Arthur Balfour at Internet Archive Works by Arthur Balfour at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Spikily Samir Balfour Arthur James Balfour Earl of in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Political officesPreceded bySir Charles Dilke President of the Local Government Board1885 1886 Succeeded byJoseph ChamberlainPreceded byThe Earl of Dalhousie Secretary for Scotland1886 1887 Succeeded byThe Marquess of LothianPreceded bySir Michael Hicks Beach Chief Secretary for Ireland1887 1891 Succeeded byWilliam Lawies JacksonPreceded byW H Smith First Lord of the Treasury1891 1892 Succeeded byWilliam Ewart GladstoneLeader of the House of CommonsPreceded byThe Earl of Rosebery First Lord of the Treasury1895 1905 Succeeded bySir Henry Campbell BannermanPreceded bySir William Vernon Harcourt Leader of the House of CommonsPreceded byThe 3rd Marquess of Salisbury Lord Privy Seal1902 1903 Succeeded byThe 4th Marquess of SalisburyPrime Minister of the United Kingdom12 July 1902 4 December 1905 Succeeded bySir Henry Campbell BannermanPreceded bySir Henry Campbell Bannerman Leader of the Opposition1905 1911 Succeeded byBonar LawPreceded byWinston Churchill First Lord of the Admiralty1915 1916 Succeeded bySir Edward CarsonPreceded byThe Viscount Grey of Fallodon Foreign Secretary10 December 1916 23 October 1919 Succeeded byThe Earl Curzon of KedlestonPreceded byThe Earl Curzon of Kedleston Lord President of the Council1919 1922 Succeeded byThe 4th Marquess of SalisburyPreceded byThe Marquess Curzon of Kedleston Lord President of the Council1925 1929 Succeeded byThe Lord ParmoorParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byRobert Dimsdale Member of Parliament for Hertford1874 1885 Succeeded byAbel SmithNew constituency Member of Parliament for Manchester East1885 1906 Succeeded byThomas Gardner HorridgePreceded byAlban GibbsSir Edward Clarke Member of Parliament for the City of LondonFebruary 1906 1922 With Sir Edward Clarke to June 1906Sir Frederick Banbury from June 1906 Succeeded byEdward GrenfellSir Frederick BanburyParty political officesPreceded byW H Smith Conservative Leader in the Commons Succeeded byBonar LawPreceded byThe 3rd Marquess of Salisbury Leader of the Conservative Party1902 1911Academic officesPreceded byThe Lord Reay Rector of the University of St Andrews1886 1889 Succeeded byThe Marquess of Dufferin and AvaPreceded byThe Earl of Lytton Rector of the University of Glasgow1890 1893 Succeeded byJohn Eldon GorstPreceded byLord Glencorse Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh1891 1930 Succeeded byJ M BarriePreceded byThe Lord Rayleigh Chancellor of the University of Cambridge1919 1930 Succeeded byStanley BaldwinNew institution Visitor of Girton College Cambridge1924 1930 Succeeded byThe Earl Baldwin of BewdleyPeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Earl of Balfour1922 1930 Succeeded byGerald William BalfourAwards and achievementsPreceded byJohn Ringling Cover of Time magazine13 April 1925 Succeeded byWalter P ChryslerScottish feudal lordshipPreceded bySir Charles Dalrymple Lord and Baron of Hailes1876 1930 Succeeded byGerald William Balfour Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Balfour amp oldid 1199089401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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