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Charles Wilson, 1st Baron Moran

Charles McMoran Wilson, 1st Baron Moran, MC, PRCP (10 November 1882 – 12 April 1977) was personal doctor to Winston Churchill from 1940 until the latter's death in 1965. His book The Struggle for Survival revealed much about Churchill's physical and psychological state, possibly including clinical depression, while coping with the strain of high office. It was not, however, the strict historical record that it appeared to be, as it lacked any accredited sources, such as diary-entries or confirmed reporting of conversations. Some people also felt that it breached patient–doctor confidentiality.

The Lord Moran
Charles McMoran Wilson c. 1943
Member of the House of Lords
as Baron Moran
In office
8 March 1943 – 12 April 1977
Preceded byPeerage created
Succeeded byJohn Wilson
President of the Royal College of Physicians
In office
1941–1949
Preceded bySir Robert Hutchinson
Succeeded byWalter Russell Brain
Personal details
Born(1882-11-10)10 November 1882
Skipton, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Died12 April 1977(1977-04-12) (aged 94)
Newton Valence, Hampshire, England
Spouse
Dorothy Dufton
(m. 1919)
Children2, including John
Alma materSt Mary's Hospital Medical School
Charles McMoran Wilson c. 1900

Background Edit

Moran was born in Skipton, Yorkshire, younger son and youngest of three children of John Forsythe Wilson, a physician and general practitioner from Northern Ireland, and his wife Mary Jane, daughter of the Reverend John Julius Hannah, a Presbyterian minister of Clogher.[1]

He was educated at Pocklington Grammar School then studied medicine at St Mary's Hospital Medical School, now the Imperial College School of Medicine, graduating with a MBBS in 1908. He took his MD degree in 1913 at the same medical school. As a student he played in the college rugby fifteen as well as at county level for Middlesex.[2]

He enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps in the First World War, rising to major. He was medical officer to the 1st Battalion of the Royal Fusiliers from 1914 to 1917 and medical officer in charge of the medical facilities at the British 7th Stationary Hospital in Boulogne from 1917 to 1918.[3] He won the Military Cross in 1916[4] for services during the Battle of the Somme, and the Italian Silver Medal of Military Valour in 1917 and was twice mentioned in despatches. After the war, he conducted research into mustard gas poisoning.[2]

Later medical career Edit

Longer term, based on his frontline experience, he developed his study into the effects of wartime conditions on the resilience of troops which was published in the 1930s as a series of lectures titled The Mind in War and culminated in a book The Anatomy of Courage, published in 1945 at the end of the Second World War.[2] He lectured on courage to officer students at the Staff College in Camberley.[5]

He was the dean of St Mary's Hospital Medical School between 1920 and 1945, where he oversaw the rebuilding of the premises, while also maintaining a private practice in London at Number 129, Harley Street. In 1938 he chaired a Home Office committee to plan the organization of London's hospitals to receive casualties expected in the then anticipated Second World War.[2] He was a prominent scientist in his day, and was elected president of the Royal College of Physicians in April 1941 and was re-elected each year until 1950, when he resigned in favour of Russell Brain.[6]

He was knighted in 1938[7] and was created Baron Moran, of Manton in the County of Wilts on 8 March 1943[8] and made his maiden speech in the House of Lords the same year, on the Beveridge Report.[6] He was also involved in many other debates on the National Health Service.[6] His skilfulness in negotiations with the British Medical Association and the Ministry of Health gave him the nickname "Corkscrew Charlie".[9]

He helped set up the Spens Committee which laid down the remuneration of general practitioners and dentists, and chaired the government standing committee setting the payment of specialists from 1949 to 1961. He declined the appointment as a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE) offered at the end of the chairmanship.[9]

Churchill's physician and The Struggle for Survival Edit

During his time as Winston Churchill's private physician, which began in May 1940, two weeks into Churchill's first term as Prime Minister, Moran accompanied Churchill on most of his travels, and met several prominent figures, including Anthony Eden, Field-Marshal Montgomery (later the 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein), Louis Mountbatten and Lord Beaverbrook. He also selected appropriate consulting specialists for Churchill when necessary. Although Moran found the travels frustrating when they conflicted with business planning the NHS in London, according to one biographer, Professor Richard Lovell, Moran saw his patient as "the greatest Englishman since Chatham and regarded his care of him as his wartime duty".[9]

In mid-1964, Clementine Churchill learned that Moran was planning to publish a book detailing his personal relationship with Churchill. Lady Churchill criticised his intentions, "I had always supposed that the relationship between a doctor and his patient was one of complete confidence…".[10] Moran's book, The Struggle for Survival, is about Churchill during and after the war. It was published in 1966, fifteen months after Churchill's death, and aroused much controversy, as its detailed descriptions of Churchill's failing health appeared to constitute a breach of patient-doctor confidentiality.[6] Moran maintained that he had compiled the book with Churchill's knowledge, although he had sought no permission to include conversations made in his professional capacity with the Cabinet Secretary, other officials and medical colleagues.[9]

The book revealed that "Black Dog" was the name Churchill gave to "the prolonged fits of depression from which he suffered",[11] leading many later authors to suggest that throughout his life Churchill was a victim of, or at risk from, clinical depression. Formulated in this way, Churchill's mental health history contains unmistakable echoes of the seminal interpretation of Lord Moran's Black Dog revelations made in an essay by Dr Joseph Storr.[12] In drawing so heavily on Moran for what he took to be the latter's totally reliable, first-hand clinical evidence of Churchill's lifelong struggle with "prolonged and recurrent depression" and its associated "despair", Storr produced a seemingly authoritative and persuasive diagnostic essay that, in the words of John Ramsden, "strongly influenced all later accounts".[13]

However, Storr was not aware that, as Professor Lovell has shown, Moran, contrary to the impression created in his book, kept no actual diary during his years as Churchill's doctor. Nor was Storr aware that Moran's book as published was a much rewritten account which mixed together Moran's contemporaneous jottings with later material acquired from other sources.[14] Wilfred Attenborough has demonstrated the key Black Dog "diary" entry for 14 August 1944 was an arbitrarily dated pastiche in which the explicit reference to Black Dog—the first of the few in the book (with an associated footnote definition of the term)—was taken, not from anything Churchill had said to Moran, but from much later claims made to Moran by Brendan Bracken (a non-clinician and wartime Minister of Information) in 1958.[15] Although seemingly unnoticed by Storr and those he influenced, Moran later on in his book retracts his earlier suggestion, also derived from Bracken, that, towards the end of the Second World War, Churchill was succumbing to "the inborn melancholia of the Churchill blood". Also unnoticed by Storr and others is Moran's statement in his final chapter that Churchill had managed before the start of the First World War "to extirpate bouts of depression from his system".[16]

Despite the difficulties with Moran's book, the many illustrations it provides of a Churchill understandably plunged into temporary low moods by military defeats and other severely adverse developments make a compelling portrait of a great man reacting to, but not significantly impeded by, worry and overstrain, consistent with the portraits of others who worked closely with Churchill.[17] Moreover, it can be deduced from Moran's book that Churchill did not receive medication for depression—the amphetamine that Moran prescribed for special occasions, especially for big speeches from the autumn of 1953 onwards, was to combat the effects of Churchill's stroke of that year.[18]

Besides medical observations, Moran also recounted personal political comments made by Churchill in conversation. Visiting Churchill on the afternoon following the announcement of the 1945 General Election results, Moran commiserated with him on the "ingratitude" of the British public for voting in a Labour government, to which Churchill, referring to the recent wartime hardships, replied "I wouldn't call it that. They have had a very hard time".[19] He also recalled Churchill suggesting in 1946—the year before he put the idea (unsuccessfully) in a memo to President Truman—that the United States make a pre-emptive atomic bomb attack on Moscow while the Soviet Union did not yet possess nuclear weapons.[20] The motivations behind the publication of Moran's book, The Struggle for Survival, and his criticisms of Churchill, may have been due to Moran's personal grievances against Churchill's staunch imperialist attitudes. He once stated: "Winston thinks only of the colour of their skin."[21]

Family and later life Edit

Moran married in 1919 Dorothy Dufton, daughter of Samuel Felix Dufton, HM Inspector of Schools for Yorkshire. She was a research physiologist, who had been appointed MBE for work with the Ministry of Munitions in World War I.[5] They had two sons, John (the second Baron) and Geoffrey. He died in 1977 aged 94 at the latter son's home in Newton Valence, Hampshire, and was buried in the churchyard there. He was survived by his wife, who died in 1983.[9]

Moran said he was a descendant of essayist William Hazlitt, whose surname was given as a middle name to his own second son. Richard Lovell notes the ancestor was surnamed Haslett.[22]

Publications Edit

  • The Anatomy of Courage (1945), London: Constable, ISBN 0-09-451390-2
  • Winston Churchill: The Struggle for Survival (1966) London: Constable, ISBN 0-7867-1706-8
  • Churchill taken from the Diaries of Lord Moran: The Struggle for Survival, 1940–1965 (1966 – 1st American ed.) Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Churchill at War 1940 to 1945: the memoirs of Churchill's doctor, with an introduction by Lord Moran's son, John, the second Lord Moran, who held the title at the time. This diary paints an intimate portrait of Churchill by Sir Charles Wilson, his personal physician (Lord Moran), who spent the war years with the Prime Minister. In his diary, Moran recorded insights into Churchill's character, and moments when he let his guard down. New York: Carroll & Graf, 2002. Reissue ISBN 0-7867-1041-1

References Edit

  1. ^ Dictionary of National Biography 1971–1980. Oxford University Press. 1986. p. 913. ISBN 0-19-865208-9.
  2. ^ a b c d Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 59. Oxford University Press. 2004. p. 503. ISBN 0-19-861409-8.
  3. ^ Who's Who, 1976. A and C Black. p. 1681. ISBN 0-7136-1628-8.
  4. ^ "No. 29765". The London Gazette (Supplement). 26 September 1916. p. 9432.
  5. ^ a b Dictionary of National Biography, 1971–1980. p. 914.
  6. ^ a b c d Wellcome Library
  7. ^ "No. 34485". The London Gazette. 18 February 1938. pp. 1068–1069.
  8. ^ "No. 35933". The London Gazette. 9 March 1943. p. 1143.
  9. ^ a b c d e Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 59. p. 504.
  10. ^ Reynolds, David (15 February 2018). "Soames [née Spencer Churchill], Mary, Lady Soames (1922–2014), author and public servant". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/odnb/9780198614128.013.109451. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8.
  11. ^ Lord Moran, Winston Churchill: the Struggle for Survival, 1940–1965 (Constable)
  12. ^ A. Storr, "The Man", in A. J. P. Taylor et al., Churchill: Four Faces and the Man (Penguin, 1973).
  13. ^ J. Ramsden, Man of the Century: Winston Churchill and his Legend since 1945 (Harper Collins, 2003), p. 531.
  14. ^ R. Lovell, Churchill's Doctor (Royal Society of Medicine Services, 1992)
  15. ^ W. Attenborough, Churchill and the "Black Dog" of Depression (Palgrave, 2014), pp. 187–97.
  16. ^ Lord Moran, Struggle for Survival, pp. 307, 309–10, 785–86, 786–88.
  17. ^ Sir John Wheeler-Bennett (ed.), Action This Day (Macmillan, 1968); J. Colville, The Fringes of Power (Hodder and Stoughton, 1985); Lord Ismay, Memoirs (Heinemann, 1960); Harriman, A. and Abel, E., Special Envoy to Churchill and Stalin, 1941–1946 (Hutchinson, 1976).
  18. ^ W. Attenborough, Churchill and the "Black Dog" of Depression (Palgrave, 2014), pp. 153–58.
  19. ^ Gilbert, Martin. Winston S. Churchill: Never Despair: 1945–1965 (1988), pp. 57, 107–09.
  20. ^ Maier, Thomas (2014). When Lions Roar: The Churchills and the Kennedys. Crown. pp. 412–413. ISBN 978-0307956798.
  21. ^ "Not his finest hour: The dark side of Winston Churchill". The Independent. 28 October 2010. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  22. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Volume 59. p. 502.

Bibliography Edit

  • Lovell, Richard (1992). Churchill's Doctor: A Biography of Lord Moran. London: Royal Society of Medicine.

External links Edit

charles, wilson, baron, moran, charles, mcmoran, wilson, baron, moran, prcp, november, 1882, april, 1977, personal, doctor, winston, churchill, from, 1940, until, latter, death, 1965, book, struggle, survival, revealed, much, about, churchill, physical, psycho. Charles McMoran Wilson 1st Baron Moran MC PRCP 10 November 1882 12 April 1977 was personal doctor to Winston Churchill from 1940 until the latter s death in 1965 His book The Struggle for Survival revealed much about Churchill s physical and psychological state possibly including clinical depression while coping with the strain of high office It was not however the strict historical record that it appeared to be as it lacked any accredited sources such as diary entries or confirmed reporting of conversations Some people also felt that it breached patient doctor confidentiality The Right HonourableThe Lord MoranMC PRCPCharles McMoran Wilson c 1943Member of the House of Lordsas Baron MoranIn office 8 March 1943 12 April 1977Preceded byPeerage createdSucceeded byJohn WilsonPresident of the Royal College of PhysiciansIn office 1941 1949Preceded bySir Robert HutchinsonSucceeded byWalter Russell BrainPersonal detailsBorn 1882 11 10 10 November 1882Skipton West Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDied12 April 1977 1977 04 12 aged 94 Newton Valence Hampshire EnglandSpouseDorothy Dufton m 1919 wbr Children2 including JohnAlma materSt Mary s Hospital Medical SchoolCharles McMoran Wilson c 1900 Contents 1 Background 2 Later medical career 2 1 Churchill s physician and The Struggle for Survival 3 Family and later life 4 Publications 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 External linksBackground EditMoran was born in Skipton Yorkshire younger son and youngest of three children of John Forsythe Wilson a physician and general practitioner from Northern Ireland and his wife Mary Jane daughter of the Reverend John Julius Hannah a Presbyterian minister of Clogher 1 He was educated at Pocklington Grammar School then studied medicine at St Mary s Hospital Medical School now the Imperial College School of Medicine graduating with a MBBS in 1908 He took his MD degree in 1913 at the same medical school As a student he played in the college rugby fifteen as well as at county level for Middlesex 2 He enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps in the First World War rising to major He was medical officer to the 1st Battalion of the Royal Fusiliers from 1914 to 1917 and medical officer in charge of the medical facilities at the British 7th Stationary Hospital in Boulogne from 1917 to 1918 3 He won the Military Cross in 1916 4 for services during the Battle of the Somme and the Italian Silver Medal of Military Valour in 1917 and was twice mentioned in despatches After the war he conducted research into mustard gas poisoning 2 Later medical career EditLonger term based on his frontline experience he developed his study into the effects of wartime conditions on the resilience of troops which was published in the 1930s as a series of lectures titled The Mind in War and culminated in a book The Anatomy of Courage published in 1945 at the end of the Second World War 2 He lectured on courage to officer students at the Staff College in Camberley 5 He was the dean of St Mary s Hospital Medical School between 1920 and 1945 where he oversaw the rebuilding of the premises while also maintaining a private practice in London at Number 129 Harley Street In 1938 he chaired a Home Office committee to plan the organization of London s hospitals to receive casualties expected in the then anticipated Second World War 2 He was a prominent scientist in his day and was elected president of the Royal College of Physicians in April 1941 and was re elected each year until 1950 when he resigned in favour of Russell Brain 6 He was knighted in 1938 7 and was created Baron Moran of Manton in the County of Wilts on 8 March 1943 8 and made his maiden speech in the House of Lords the same year on the Beveridge Report 6 He was also involved in many other debates on the National Health Service 6 His skilfulness in negotiations with the British Medical Association and the Ministry of Health gave him the nickname Corkscrew Charlie 9 He helped set up the Spens Committee which laid down the remuneration of general practitioners and dentists and chaired the government standing committee setting the payment of specialists from 1949 to 1961 He declined the appointment as a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire GBE offered at the end of the chairmanship 9 Churchill s physician and The Struggle for Survival Edit During his time as Winston Churchill s private physician which began in May 1940 two weeks into Churchill s first term as Prime Minister Moran accompanied Churchill on most of his travels and met several prominent figures including Anthony Eden Field Marshal Montgomery later the 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein Louis Mountbatten and Lord Beaverbrook He also selected appropriate consulting specialists for Churchill when necessary Although Moran found the travels frustrating when they conflicted with business planning the NHS in London according to one biographer Professor Richard Lovell Moran saw his patient as the greatest Englishman since Chatham and regarded his care of him as his wartime duty 9 In mid 1964 Clementine Churchill learned that Moran was planning to publish a book detailing his personal relationship with Churchill Lady Churchill criticised his intentions I had always supposed that the relationship between a doctor and his patient was one of complete confidence 10 Moran s book The Struggle for Survival is about Churchill during and after the war It was published in 1966 fifteen months after Churchill s death and aroused much controversy as its detailed descriptions of Churchill s failing health appeared to constitute a breach of patient doctor confidentiality 6 Moran maintained that he had compiled the book with Churchill s knowledge although he had sought no permission to include conversations made in his professional capacity with the Cabinet Secretary other officials and medical colleagues 9 The book revealed that Black Dog was the name Churchill gave to the prolonged fits of depression from which he suffered 11 leading many later authors to suggest that throughout his life Churchill was a victim of or at risk from clinical depression Formulated in this way Churchill s mental health history contains unmistakable echoes of the seminal interpretation of Lord Moran s Black Dog revelations made in an essay by Dr Joseph Storr 12 In drawing so heavily on Moran for what he took to be the latter s totally reliable first hand clinical evidence of Churchill s lifelong struggle with prolonged and recurrent depression and its associated despair Storr produced a seemingly authoritative and persuasive diagnostic essay that in the words of John Ramsden strongly influenced all later accounts 13 However Storr was not aware that as Professor Lovell has shown Moran contrary to the impression created in his book kept no actual diary during his years as Churchill s doctor Nor was Storr aware that Moran s book as published was a much rewritten account which mixed together Moran s contemporaneous jottings with later material acquired from other sources 14 Wilfred Attenborough has demonstrated the key Black Dog diary entry for 14 August 1944 was an arbitrarily dated pastiche in which the explicit reference to Black Dog the first of the few in the book with an associated footnote definition of the term was taken not from anything Churchill had said to Moran but from much later claims made to Moran by Brendan Bracken a non clinician and wartime Minister of Information in 1958 15 Although seemingly unnoticed by Storr and those he influenced Moran later on in his book retracts his earlier suggestion also derived from Bracken that towards the end of the Second World War Churchill was succumbing to the inborn melancholia of the Churchill blood Also unnoticed by Storr and others is Moran s statement in his final chapter that Churchill had managed before the start of the First World War to extirpate bouts of depression from his system 16 Despite the difficulties with Moran s book the many illustrations it provides of a Churchill understandably plunged into temporary low moods by military defeats and other severely adverse developments make a compelling portrait of a great man reacting to but not significantly impeded by worry and overstrain consistent with the portraits of others who worked closely with Churchill 17 Moreover it can be deduced from Moran s book that Churchill did not receive medication for depression the amphetamine that Moran prescribed for special occasions especially for big speeches from the autumn of 1953 onwards was to combat the effects of Churchill s stroke of that year 18 Besides medical observations Moran also recounted personal political comments made by Churchill in conversation Visiting Churchill on the afternoon following the announcement of the 1945 General Election results Moran commiserated with him on the ingratitude of the British public for voting in a Labour government to which Churchill referring to the recent wartime hardships replied I wouldn t call it that They have had a very hard time 19 He also recalled Churchill suggesting in 1946 the year before he put the idea unsuccessfully in a memo to President Truman that the United States make a pre emptive atomic bomb attack on Moscow while the Soviet Union did not yet possess nuclear weapons 20 The motivations behind the publication of Moran s book The Struggle for Survival and his criticisms of Churchill may have been due to Moran s personal grievances against Churchill s staunch imperialist attitudes He once stated Winston thinks only of the colour of their skin 21 Family and later life EditMoran married in 1919 Dorothy Dufton daughter of Samuel Felix Dufton HM Inspector of Schools for Yorkshire She was a research physiologist who had been appointed MBE for work with the Ministry of Munitions in World War I 5 They had two sons John the second Baron and Geoffrey He died in 1977 aged 94 at the latter son s home in Newton Valence Hampshire and was buried in the churchyard there He was survived by his wife who died in 1983 9 Moran said he was a descendant of essayist William Hazlitt whose surname was given as a middle name to his own second son Richard Lovell notes the ancestor was surnamed Haslett 22 Publications EditThe Anatomy of Courage 1945 London Constable ISBN 0 09 451390 2 Winston Churchill The Struggle for Survival 1966 London Constable ISBN 0 7867 1706 8 Churchill taken from the Diaries of Lord Moran The Struggle for Survival 1940 1965 1966 1st American ed Boston Houghton Mifflin Churchill at War 1940 to 1945 the memoirs of Churchill s doctor with an introduction by Lord Moran s son John the second Lord Moran who held the title at the time This diary paints an intimate portrait of Churchill by Sir Charles Wilson his personal physician Lord Moran who spent the war years with the Prime Minister In his diary Moran recorded insights into Churchill s character and moments when he let his guard down New York Carroll amp Graf 2002 Reissue ISBN 0 7867 1041 1References Edit Dictionary of National Biography 1971 1980 Oxford University Press 1986 p 913 ISBN 0 19 865208 9 a b c d Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Volume 59 Oxford University Press 2004 p 503 ISBN 0 19 861409 8 Who s Who 1976 A and C Black p 1681 ISBN 0 7136 1628 8 No 29765 The London Gazette Supplement 26 September 1916 p 9432 a b Dictionary of National Biography 1971 1980 p 914 a b c d Wellcome Library No 34485 The London Gazette 18 February 1938 pp 1068 1069 No 35933 The London Gazette 9 March 1943 p 1143 a b c d e Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Volume 59 p 504 Reynolds David 15 February 2018 Soames nee Spencer Churchill Mary Lady Soames 1922 2014 author and public servant Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 odnb 9780198614128 013 109451 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Lord Moran Winston Churchill the Struggle for Survival 1940 1965 Constable A Storr The Man in A J P Taylor et al Churchill Four Faces and the Man Penguin 1973 J Ramsden Man of the Century Winston Churchill and his Legend since 1945 Harper Collins 2003 p 531 R Lovell Churchill s Doctor Royal Society of Medicine Services 1992 W Attenborough Churchill and the Black Dog of Depression Palgrave 2014 pp 187 97 Lord Moran Struggle for Survival pp 307 309 10 785 86 786 88 Sir John Wheeler Bennett ed Action This Day Macmillan 1968 J Colville The Fringes of Power Hodder and Stoughton 1985 Lord Ismay Memoirs Heinemann 1960 Harriman A and Abel E Special Envoy to Churchill and Stalin 1941 1946 Hutchinson 1976 W Attenborough Churchill and the Black Dog of Depression Palgrave 2014 pp 153 58 Gilbert Martin Winston S Churchill Never Despair 1945 1965 1988 pp 57 107 09 Maier Thomas 2014 When Lions Roar The Churchills and the Kennedys Crown pp 412 413 ISBN 978 0307956798 Not his finest hour The dark side of Winston Churchill The Independent 28 October 2010 Retrieved 2 April 2019 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Volume 59 p 502 Bibliography Edit Lovell Richard 1992 Churchill s Doctor A Biography of Lord Moran London Royal Society of Medicine External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Wilson 1st Baron Moran Wellcome Library blurb on Lord Moran Portraits of Charles McMoran Wilson 1st Baron Moran at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Academic officesPreceded bySir Robert Hutchinson Bt President of the Royal College of Physicians1941 1949 Succeeded byWalter Russell BrainPeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Baron Moran1943 1977 Succeeded byRichard John Wilson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Wilson 1st Baron Moran amp oldid 1149280764, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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