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Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford

Francis Aungier Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford, KG, PC (5 December 1905 – 3 August 2001), known to his family as Frank Longford and styled Lord Pakenham from 1945 to 1961, was a British politician and social reformer. A member of the Labour Party, he was one of its longest-serving politicians. He held cabinet positions on several occasions between 1947 and 1968. Longford was politically active until his death in 2001. A member of an old, landed Anglo-Irish family, the Pakenhams (who became Earls of Longford), he was one of the few aristocratic hereditary peers ever to serve in a senior capacity within a Labour government.

The Earl of Longford
Longford in 1974
Leader of the House of Lords
In office
18 October 1964 – 16 January 1968
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byThe Lord Carrington
Succeeded byThe Lord Shackleton
Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal
In office
6 April 1966 – 16 January 1968
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded bySir Frank Soskice
Succeeded byThe Lord Shackleton
In office
18 October 1964 – 23 December 1965
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded bySelwyn Lloyd
Succeeded bySir Frank Soskice
Secretary of State for the Colonies
In office
23 December 1965 – 6 April 1966
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime MinisterHarold Wilson
Preceded byAnthony Greenwood
Succeeded byFrederick Lee
First Lord of the Admiralty
In office
24 May 1951 – 13 October 1951
MonarchGeorge VI
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byThe Viscount Hall
Succeeded byJames Thomas
Minister of Civil Aviation
In office
31 May 1948 – 1 June 1951
MonarchGeorge VI
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byThe Lord Nathan
Succeeded byThe Lord Ogmore
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
(Deputy Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs)
In office
17 April 1947 – 31 May 1948
MonarchGeorge VI
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byJohn Hynd
Succeeded byHugh Dalton
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for War
In office
4 October 1946 – 17 April 1947
MonarchGeorge VI
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byThe Lord Nathan
Succeeded byJohn Freeman
Lord-in-waiting
Government Whip
In office
14 October 1945 – 4 October 1946
MonarchGeorge VI
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byThe Lord Alness
Succeeded byThe Lord Chorley
Member of the House of Lords
as a hereditary peer
16 October 1945 – 11 November 1999
Preceded byPeerage created [1]
Succeeded bySeat abolished
as a life peer
17 November 1999 – 3 August 2001
Personal details
Born
Francis Aungier Pakenham

(1905-12-05)5 December 1905
London, England
Died3 August 2001(2001-08-03) (aged 95)
London, England
Political partyLabour
Spouse
(m. 1931)
Children8, including Antonia, Thomas, Judith, Rachel, and Michael
Parent(s)Thomas Pakenham, 5th Earl of Longford
Lady Mary Child-Villiers
Alma materNew College, Oxford

Longford was famed for championing social outcasts and unpopular causes.[2] He is especially notable for his lifelong advocacy of penal reform. Longford visited prisons on a regular basis for nearly 70 years until his death. He advocated for rehabilitation programmes and helped create the modern British parole system in the 1960s following the abolition of the death penalty. His ultimately unsuccessful campaign for the release of Moors murderer Myra Hindley attracted much media and public controversy. For this work, the Longford Prize is named after him. It is awarded annually during the Longford Lecture and recognises achievement in the field of penal reform.[3]

As a devout Christian determined to translate faith into action, he was known for his bombastic style and his eccentricity.[4] Although a shrewd and influential politician, he was also widely unpopular among Labour leaders, particularly for his lack of ministerial ability, and was moved from cabinet post to cabinet post, never serving more than two years at any one ministry. Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson opined that Longford had the mental capacity of a 12-year-old.[5]

In 1972, he was made a Knight Companion of the Garter. In the same year, he was appointed to head the group charged with investigating the effects of pornography on society which published the controversial Pornography Report (the Longford Report).[6][7] He became known as a campaigner against pornography and held the view that it was degrading to both its users and to those who worked in the trade, especially women.[8] Longford was also an outspoken critic of the British press, and once said it was "trembling on the brink of obscenity".[9]

Longford was instrumental in decriminalising homosexuality in the United Kingdom, but was always forthright with his strong moral disapproval of homosexual acts on religious grounds.[10][11] He opposed furthering gay rights legislation, including the equalisation of the age of consent, and also supported the passage of Section 28.[11][12]

Background and education edit

Born in London to an Anglo-Irish aristocratic family, he was the second son of Thomas Pakenham, 5th Earl of Longford in the Peerage of Ireland.[13] He was educated at Eton College and New College, Oxford,[13] where as an undergraduate he was a member of the Bullingdon Club. Despite having failed to be awarded a scholarship, he graduated with a first-class honours degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics and became a don at Christ Church.

Political career edit

 
Pakenham at his wedding in 1931

After a disastrous spell in stockbroking with Buckmaster & Moore, in 1931 the 25-year-old Pakenham joined the Conservative Research Department where he developed education policy for the Conservative Party. His wife Elizabeth persuaded him to become a socialist.[14] They were married on 3 November 1931 and had eight children. In 1940, only a few months after the onset of the Second World War, he suffered a nervous breakdown and was invalided out of the armed forces.[5] The same year, he became a Roman Catholic.[13] His wife was initially dismayed by this, for she had been brought up a Unitarian and associated the Church of Rome with reactionary politics, but in 1946 she joined the same church.[15] During the war, Pakenham was hired as an assistant for William Beveridge, and was involved in the production of the Beveridge Report and the 1944 book Full Employment in a Free Society.[13]

Pakenham then embarked on a political career. In July 1945 he contested Oxford against the sitting Conservative member, Quintin Hogg, but was defeated by nearly 3,000 votes.[13] In October of that year he was created Baron Pakenham, of Cowley in the City of Oxford, in the Peerage of the United Kingdom,[16] by the Labour government of Clement Attlee, and took his seat in the House of Lords as one of the few Labour peers. He was immediately appointed a Lord-in-waiting by Attlee. In 1947, he was appointed deputy Foreign Secretary, outside the cabinet, with special responsibility for the British zone in occupied Germany. He made headlines by telling German audiences that the British people forgave them for what had happened in the war; at his death, the Lord Bishop of Birmingham remarked that West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer was supposed to have "counted him as one of the founders of the Federal Republic".[17] In May 1948, he was moved to the lower-profile role of Minister of Civil Aviation and was sworn of the Privy Council in June of that year. He continued in this post until May 1951. From May until the fall of the administration in October 1951, he was First Lord of the Admiralty.

 
On television discussion series After Dark in 1988

In 1961, Pakenham inherited from his brother the earldom of Longford in the Peerage of Ireland and from then onward was generally known to the public as Lord Longford. When Labour returned to power in October 1964 under Harold Wilson, Longford was appointed Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the House of Lords,[18] despite the fact that Wilson had little respect for him.[5] In December 1965 he became Secretary of State for the Colonies, continuing as Leader of the House of Lords. After only four months at the Colonial Office, he was removed from the post for failing to master his brief,[citation needed] and again became Lord Privy Seal in April 1966. Wilson often talked about sacking Longford from his government, which is believed by some to have led to Longford's resignation as Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the House of Lords in January 1968 – though the actual occasion of his resignation was the failure of Education Secretary Patrick Gordon Walker to agree to the raising of the school-leaving age.[5][19] In 1972 he was created a Knight Companion of the Garter.[20]

Penal reform edit

Longford began visiting prisoners in the 1930s when he was a city councillor in Oxford, and continued to do so every week, all around the country, until shortly before his death in 2001. Among the thousands he befriended and helped were a small number of individuals who had committed the most notorious crimes, including child murderer Myra Hindley.

In 1956, he set up New Bridge Foundation, an organisation that aimed to help prisoners stay in touch with society and integrate them back into it.[21][22]

New Bridge set up Inside Time in 1990, the only national newspaper for the UK's prison population. As of 2014, novelist and journalist Rachel Billington, Longford's daughter, worked at the title one day a week.[23][24] Longford organised many debates on prison reform in the House of Lords from the 1950s onward, and in 1963 chaired the commission whose report recommended reform in sentencing policy and the establishment of a parole system.[25]

Longford was a leading figure in the Nationwide Festival of Light of 1971, protesting against the commercial exploitation of sex and violence, and advocating the teaching of Christ as the key to recovering moral stability in the nation. His anti-pornography campaigning made him the subject of derision and he was labelled by the press as Lord Porn when he and former prison doctor Christine Temple-Saville set out on a wide-ranging tour of sex industry establishments in the early 1970s to compile a self-funded report.[13] The press made much of his visits to strip clubs in Copenhagen.

Peter Stanford wrote in The Guardian's obituary of Longford that in the late 1980s, the peer was contacted by the solicitor for a young Dutchman, convicted of a drugs offence, sent to Albany prison on the Isle of Wight, who was suffering from AIDS and had been cut off by his family. Longford was the only person to visit the dying man, a gesture repeated in countless episodes that never made headlines, but which brought succour and relief.[4]

Myra Hindley edit

He gained a reputation for eccentricity, becoming known for his efforts to rehabilitate offenders and in particular campaigning for the parole and release from prison of the Moors murderer Myra Hindley, who had been jailed for life along with Ian Brady in 1966 for the Moors Murders.[13]

Longford's support for Hindley led to the soubriquet Lord Wrongford from the tabloid press, which largely opposed Hindley being released from prison. It also coincided with Longford's contact with Hindley becoming public knowledge in 1972,[26] when "Lord Porn" was in the midst of the debacle of a much-lampooned anti-pornography crusade against "indecency", giving rise to more allegations of hypocrisy than had already resulted from his tours of sex clubs.

In 1977, 11 years after Hindley was convicted of two murders and being an accessory to a third murder, Longford appeared on television and spoke openly of his belief that Hindley should now be considered for parole as she had shown clear signs of progress in prison and now served long enough for the Parole Board to assess her suitability for parole. He also supported Hindley's claims that her role in the Moors Murders was merely that of an unwilling accessory, rather than an active participant, and that she had only taken part due to Brady's abuse and threats. These claims were aired in the inaugural episode of Brass Tacks, which featured arguments for and against Hindley being considered for parole. Ann West, the mother of Lesley Ann Downey, spoke out against the suggestion of Hindley ever being paroled, and openly told viewers that she would kill Hindley if she ever was released.[27]

In 1985, he condemned the Parole Board's decision not to consider Hindley's release for another five years as "barbaric". His campaign for Hindley continued even after she admitted to two more murders in 1986, which further strengthened media and public suspicion that Hindley’s reported rehabilitation and remorse were nothing more than a ploy to boost her chances of gaining parole. There was also widespread doubt regarding Hindley’s claims that she had only taken part in the killings due to being bullied and blackmailed by Brady.

In 1990, Home Secretary David Waddington ruled that "life should mean life" for Hindley, who had been told by earlier Home Secretaries and High Court judges that she would have to serve a minimum of 25 and then 30 years before being considered for parole. Hindley was not informed of the decision until December 1994, following a High Court ruling that all life sentence prisoners had to be informed of their minimum sentences, and Longford later expressed his "disgust" at this ruling, comparing her imprisonment to that of Jews in Nazi Germany.[28] By this time Hindley, who had initially thought that having "friends in high places" could only help her cause, had cut off all contact and communication with him, now considering him a liability whose "campaigning" was little more than publicity-seeking on his own behalf. She did regain contact with him again following this, however.[29]

The next three Home Secretaries all agreed with Waddington's ruling. Hindley appealed against her whole life tariff in the High Court in December 1997, November 1998 and March 2000, but each appeal was rejected. Longford maintained that she was a reformed character who was no longer a threat to society, and had qualified for parole. He regularly commented, along with several other Hindley supporters, that she was a "political prisoner" who was being kept in prison for votes, to serve the interests of a succession of Home Secretaries and their respective governments. Home Office files would later reveal that in 1975 Longford had also lobbied various government ministers, including the Home Secretary Roy Jenkins, on Brady's behalf, as well. This resulted in Brady obtaining special treatment while remaining in the prison hospital, rather than being returned to the segregation unit. This gave him access to adolescent "youth custody" inmates; he was only removed from this privileged situation in 1982, after he was accused by several underage inmates of sexual assault. Unlike Hindley, Brady never wanted to be paroled from his life sentence, and remained in custody for more than 50 years until his death in May 2017 at the age of 79.[30]

In March 1996, Longford backed up Hindley's claim in an Oxford University magazine that she was still in prison so that the Conservative government – trailing in the opinion polls since the autumn of 1992 – would win more votes. This claim was met with anger by the mothers of two of the Moors Murders victims, including Ann West, who remained at the centre of the campaign to ensure that Hindley was never released, and once again vowed to kill Hindley if she was set free.[31] Longford regularly condemned the media - especially The Sun newspaper - for its "exploitation" of Ann West, who frequently opposed any suggestion of Hindley being paroled, often threatening to kill her if she was ever set free.

In 1986, Longford reportedly told Ann West that unless she forgave Hindley and Brady, she would not go to heaven when she died. He also commented that he was "tremendously sorry for her, but letting her decide Myra's fate would be ludicrous".[32]

Hindley died in November 2002, having never been paroled.[33]

The story of Longford's campaign to free Hindley was told in the Channel 4 film Longford in 2006. Longford was played by Jim Broadbent (who won a BAFTA for his role) and Hindley was played by Samantha Morton.

Decriminalisation of homosexuality edit

In 1956, Longford launched the first Parliamentary debate in support of the Wolfenden Report, which recommended the decriminalisation of private and consensual homosexual acts between men over the age of 21. He had been a staunch public supporter of Lord Montagu and his lover Peter Wildeblood after the two were jailed for breaking anti-gay laws in the early 1950s, and visited them regularly in prison.[34]

In the 1960s, while continuing to support the decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales, he nonetheless asserted that homosexuality was "nauseating" and that, regardless of any change in the law, it was "utterly wrongful".[35] He was of the belief that homosexuality was something that could be "taught".[36]

In the mid-1980s, Longford was a vocal supporter of the introduction of Section 28 by Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government and, during the Parliamentary debates, he stated his opinion that homosexuals are "handicapped people".[37] Section 28 became law in 1988, but Longford continued to support it and fought against its repeal when the new Labour government came to power in 1997. Section 28 was eventually repealed in 2003, two years after his death.

Longford's highly publicised condemnation of homosexuality in the late 1980s made him a target of comedian Julian Clary, who often satirised him in his stage shows and television appearances.[38]

Longford also opposed any attempts to lower the age of consent for homosexual acts below 21; in 1977 and in 1994, he spoke against lowering it to 18, claiming that "the years of 18 and 19 are [...] the years when the destiny of young men may be decided for life" and that people of that age could have too easily been seduced into a homosexual lifestyle; in the early years of Tony Blair's government, he criticized plans to equalise the age of consent for gay men (at that time 18) with that of heterosexual men (16), remarking in a 1998 House of Lords debate that:

...if someone seduced my daughter, it would be damaging and horrifying but not fatal. She would recover, marry and have lots of children... On the other hand, if some elderly, or not so elderly, schoolmaster seduced one of my sons and taught him to be a homosexual, he would ruin him for life. That is the fundamental distinction.[39]

He was ultimately unsuccessful on those counts, as the age of consent for gay men ended up being lowered to 18 in 1994 and ultimately to 16 in 2001.

House of Lords reforms (1999) edit

Under the House of Lords Act 1999, the majority of hereditary peers lost the privilege of a seat and right to vote in the House of Lords. However, Longford was one of four individuals who were hereditary peers of the first creation (in his case 1st Baron Pakenham). As such, he was created a life peer, and remained in the Lords as Baron Pakenham of Cowley, of Cowley in the County of Oxfordshire.[40] At the age of 93, he became the second-oldest person to be granted a peerage (after Lord Maenan).

Writings edit

Known for his interest in Irish history, he wrote a number of books on the topic. Peace By Ordeal: An Account from First-Hand Sources of the Negotiation and Signature of the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, published in 1935, is arguably his best-known work. It documents the negotiations of the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 between Irish and British representatives. His account uses primary sources from the time, many however anonymous. Commentators differ widely on its merits and reliability.[41][42]

Longford came greatly to admire Éamon de Valera and was chosen as the co-author of his official biography Éamon de Valera, which was published in 1970, co-written with Thomas P. O'Neill. He campaigned for decades to have the Hugh Lane bequest pictures restored to Dublin, and with Lord Moyne and Sir Denis Mahon, brokered a compromise-sharing agreement in 1959.[43]

Personal life edit

At Oxford, Longford met his wife, Elizabeth Harman, an undergraduate at Lady Margaret Hall. Their marriage produced four sons and four daughters, followed by 26 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren.

Longford died from heart failure at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital on 3 August 2001, at the age of 95, and was cremated at Mortlake Crematorium.[13][49]

His wife, Elizabeth Pakenham, Countess of Longford, died in October 2002 at the age of 96.[50] She was the author of Victoria R.I. (1964), a biography of Queen Victoria, published in the US as Born to Succeed. She also wrote a two-volume biography of the Duke of Wellington, and a volume of memoirs, The Pebbled Shore. She stood for Parliament as Labour candidate for Cheltenham in the 1935 general election and for Oxford in 1950.

The then Prime Minister, Tony Blair, said of Longford after his death: "He was a great man of passionate integrity and humanity, and a great reformer committed to modernising the law, while also caring deeply for individuals".[9]

Arms edit

Coat of arms of Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford, KG, PC
 
Coronet
An Earl's Coronet
Crest
Out of a mural crown Or a demi eagle displayed Gules beaked Or.
Escutcheon
Quarterly Or and Gules in dexter chief an eagle displayed Vert.
Supporters
Dexter a lion Azure charged on the shoulder with an escarbuncle Or sinister a griffin Azure winged Ermine beaked and membered Or.
Motto
GLORIA VIRTUTIS UMBRA

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Inherited the Earldom of Longford on 4 February 1961.
  2. ^ Hoge, Warren (6 August 2001). "Lord Longford, Champion of Eccentric Causes, Dies at 95". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 March 2015.
  3. ^ "Longford Prize". longfordtrust.org.
  4. ^ a b Stanford, Peter. "Obituary: Lord Longford". The Guardian. London.
  5. ^ a b c d Stanford, Peter (6 August 2001). "Lord Longford". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 23 October 2013.
  6. ^ "PORNOGRAPHY: THE LONGFORD REPORT (Hansard, 29 November 1972)".
  7. ^ "The Longford Report » 23 Sep 1972 » the Spectator Archive".
  8. ^ Walker, Andrew (19 October 2006). "The saint and the sinner". BBC News.
  9. ^ a b "Campaigning Lord Longford dies". cnn.com. 3 August 2001.
  10. ^ Aitken, Jonathan (2007). Heroes and Contemporaries. Continuum.
  11. ^ a b Stanford, Peter (7 July 2003). "Dangerous Liaison". The Telegraph.
  12. ^ Smith, Anna Marie (1994). New Right Discourse on Race and Sexuality: Britain, 1968–1990. Cambridge University Press. p. 205. Earl of Longford homosexuality.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Johnson, Paul (2011). "Pakenham, Francis Aungier [Frank], first Baron Pakenham and seventh earl of Longford (1905–2001), politician, writer, and philanthropist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/76133. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  14. ^ "Campaigner Lord Longford dies", BBC News, 3 August 2001. Retrieved on 31 March 2007.
  15. ^ Craig, Mary. Longford — A Biographical Portrait (Hodder & Stoughton, 1978), pp. 59–61
  16. ^ "No. 37305". The London Gazette. 12 October 1945. p. 5026.
  17. ^ "UK Parliament; House of Lords". House of Lords; Volume 627. 15 October 2001.
  18. ^ "Peering at the Catholic lords". Catholic Herald. 18 January 1985.
  19. ^ Mary Craig, Longford — A Biographical Portrait (Hodder & Stoughton, 1978), pp. 149
  20. ^ "No. 45349". The London Gazette. 23 April 1971. p. 4083.
  21. ^ Stanford, Peter, , The Independent, 20 July 2003; retrieved on 31 March 2007.
  22. ^ . New Bridge Foundation. Archived from the original on 27 November 2014. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  23. ^ "Inside Story: Prison media". The Independent. 18 February 2008. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  24. ^ Billington, Rachel (November 2014). "Month by Month". Inside Time Newspaper.
  25. ^ "Crime – a challenge to us all: report of the Labour Party Study Group (Chairman: Lord Longford)". London: Labour Party Study Group. 1964.
  26. ^ Smith, David, with Lee, Carol Ann (2011). Witness: The Story of David Smith, Chief Prosecution Witness in the Moors Murders Case. Mainstream Publishing Company. p. Chapter 22. ISBN 9781845968151.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ . Brass Tacks. 6 July 1977. Archived from the original on 18 October 2020.
  28. ^ "Case for release of Myra Hindley From Mr David L Astor and Lord Longford". The Times. 13 December 1994.
  29. ^ Staff, Duncan (13 October 2006). "Dangerous Liaison". The Guardian.
  30. ^ "How Moors murderer Brady had access to vulnerable teens in jail". BBC News. 26 June 2019.
  31. ^ "Hindley votes claim lashed". thefreelibrary.com. Retrieved 23 March 2016.
  32. ^ . bernardomahoney.com. 23 March 2016. Archived from the original on 9 December 2008.
  33. ^ "With release in sight and after 36 years in jail, Myra Hindley dies". The Guardian. 15 November 2002.
  34. ^ Stanford, Peter (2003). The Outcast's Outcast: A Biography of Lord Longford. Stroud: Sutton Publishing. pp. 512 pp. ISBN 0-7509-3248-1.
  35. ^ Galloway, Bruce. Prejudice and Pride: Discrimination Against Gay People in Modern Britain, Routledge & Keegan Paul Publishing, 1983, (page 85 – Nigel Warner).
  36. ^ Baker, Paul (2005). Public Discourses of Gay Men. Routledge.
  37. ^ "Workers' Liberty". workersliberty.org.
  38. ^ Julian Clary – The Mincing Machine Tour – Virgin Video Media (1989)
  39. ^ Stonewall website – Sexual Offences Amendment Bill (1999) – Parliamentary Briefing (page 11)
  40. ^ "No. 55672". The London Gazette. 19 November 1999. p. 12349.
  41. ^ Wilkinson, Burke (1985). The Zeal of the Convert: the Life of Erskin Childers. Second Chance Press. p. 241. ISBN 978-0-933256-53-8.
  42. ^ Michael Collins. Soldier and Statesman by Piaras Beaslaí (Dublin, 1937), Appendix, pp. 414-420
  43. ^ Foster, Roy (30 May 2015). "How Ireland was robbed of Hugh Lane's great art collection". The Guardian.
  44. ^ "Obituaries — Patrick Pakenham". The Daily Telegraph. 22 June 2005.
  45. ^ "Hon. Kevin John Toussaint Pakenham". National Portrait Gallery, London. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  46. ^ . pakenhampartners.com. Archived from the original on 23 December 2018. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  47. ^ "Ruth Lesley Pakenham (née Jackson)". National Portrait Gallery, London. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  48. ^ "Kevin Pakenham obituary". The Times. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  49. ^ (PDF). On Kew. Spring 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 December 2013.
  50. ^ Bradford, Sarah (24 October 2002). . The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 6 July 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2008.

Films about Lord Longford edit

Books about Lord Longford edit

  • Stanford, Peter (2003). The Outcast's Outcast: A Biography of Lord Longford. Stroud, UK: Sutton Publishing. pp. 512. ISBN 0-7509-3248-1.
  • Fraser, Antonia (2015), My History: A Memoir of Growing Up, New York: Doubleday. [Account, both personal and political, by a daughter of Pakenham.]  

External links edit

  • Portraits of Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
  • Longford Trust
  • New Bridge Foundation
  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by the Earl of Longford
  • "Campaigner Lord Longford dies". BBC News article dated Friday, 3 August 2001
  • "Lord Longford: Aristocratic moral crusader". BBC News obituary dated Friday, 3 August 2001
  • "Tributes to humanist peer". BBC News article dated Friday, 3 August 2001
  • Lord Longford. Guardian obituary by Peter Stanford dated Monday, 6 August 2001
  • Announcement of his taking the oath for the first time as Lord Pakenham of Cowley, House of Lords Minute of Proceedings, 17 November 1999
  • Newspaper clippings about Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  • Portrait of Frank Pakenham in the UK Parliamentary Collections
Political offices
New title
New government
Lord-in-waiting
1945–1946
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
1947–1948
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Civil Aviation
1948–1951
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Lord of the Admiralty
1951
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the House of Lords
1964–1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord Privy Seal
1964–1965
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of State for the Colonies
1965–1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord Privy Seal
1966–1968
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Labour Party in the House of Lords
1964–1968
Succeeded by
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by Earl of Longford
1961–2001
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baron Pakenham
1945–2001
Member of the House of Lords
(1945–2001)
Succeeded by

frank, pakenham, earl, longford, lord, longford, redirects, here, other, people, known, lord, longford, earl, longford, francis, aungier, pakenham, earl, longford, december, 1905, august, 2001, known, family, frank, longford, styled, lord, pakenham, from, 1945. Lord Longford redirects here For other people known as Lord Longford see Earl of Longford Francis Aungier Pakenham 7th Earl of Longford KG PC 5 December 1905 3 August 2001 known to his family as Frank Longford and styled Lord Pakenham from 1945 to 1961 was a British politician and social reformer A member of the Labour Party he was one of its longest serving politicians He held cabinet positions on several occasions between 1947 and 1968 Longford was politically active until his death in 2001 A member of an old landed Anglo Irish family the Pakenhams who became Earls of Longford he was one of the few aristocratic hereditary peers ever to serve in a senior capacity within a Labour government The Right HonourableThe Earl of LongfordKG PCLongford in 1974Leader of the House of LordsIn office 18 October 1964 16 January 1968MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterHarold WilsonPreceded byThe Lord CarringtonSucceeded byThe Lord ShackletonLord Keeper of the Privy SealIn office 6 April 1966 16 January 1968MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterHarold WilsonPreceded bySir Frank SoskiceSucceeded byThe Lord ShackletonIn office 18 October 1964 23 December 1965MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterHarold WilsonPreceded bySelwyn LloydSucceeded bySir Frank SoskiceSecretary of State for the ColoniesIn office 23 December 1965 6 April 1966MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterHarold WilsonPreceded byAnthony GreenwoodSucceeded byFrederick LeeFirst Lord of the AdmiraltyIn office 24 May 1951 13 October 1951MonarchGeorge VIPrime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byThe Viscount HallSucceeded byJames ThomasMinister of Civil AviationIn office 31 May 1948 1 June 1951MonarchGeorge VIPrime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byThe Lord NathanSucceeded byThe Lord OgmoreChancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Deputy Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs In office 17 April 1947 31 May 1948MonarchGeorge VIPrime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byJohn HyndSucceeded byHugh DaltonParliamentary Under Secretary of State for WarIn office 4 October 1946 17 April 1947MonarchGeorge VIPrime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byThe Lord NathanSucceeded byJohn FreemanLord in waitingGovernment WhipIn office 14 October 1945 4 October 1946MonarchGeorge VIPrime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byThe Lord AlnessSucceeded byThe Lord ChorleyMember of the House of LordsLord Temporalas a hereditary peer 16 October 1945 11 November 1999Preceded byPeerage created 1 Succeeded bySeat abolishedas a life peer 17 November 1999 3 August 2001Personal detailsBornFrancis Aungier Pakenham 1905 12 05 5 December 1905London EnglandDied3 August 2001 2001 08 03 aged 95 London EnglandPolitical partyLabourSpouseElizabeth Harman m 1931 wbr Children8 including Antonia Thomas Judith Rachel and MichaelParent s Thomas Pakenham 5th Earl of LongfordLady Mary Child VilliersAlma materNew College OxfordLongford was famed for championing social outcasts and unpopular causes 2 He is especially notable for his lifelong advocacy of penal reform Longford visited prisons on a regular basis for nearly 70 years until his death He advocated for rehabilitation programmes and helped create the modern British parole system in the 1960s following the abolition of the death penalty His ultimately unsuccessful campaign for the release of Moors murderer Myra Hindley attracted much media and public controversy For this work the Longford Prize is named after him It is awarded annually during the Longford Lecture and recognises achievement in the field of penal reform 3 As a devout Christian determined to translate faith into action he was known for his bombastic style and his eccentricity 4 Although a shrewd and influential politician he was also widely unpopular among Labour leaders particularly for his lack of ministerial ability and was moved from cabinet post to cabinet post never serving more than two years at any one ministry Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson opined that Longford had the mental capacity of a 12 year old 5 In 1972 he was made a Knight Companion of the Garter In the same year he was appointed to head the group charged with investigating the effects of pornography on society which published the controversial Pornography Report the Longford Report 6 7 He became known as a campaigner against pornography and held the view that it was degrading to both its users and to those who worked in the trade especially women 8 Longford was also an outspoken critic of the British press and once said it was trembling on the brink of obscenity 9 Longford was instrumental in decriminalising homosexuality in the United Kingdom but was always forthright with his strong moral disapproval of homosexual acts on religious grounds 10 11 He opposed furthering gay rights legislation including the equalisation of the age of consent and also supported the passage of Section 28 11 12 Contents 1 Background and education 2 Political career 3 Penal reform 3 1 Myra Hindley 4 Decriminalisation of homosexuality 5 House of Lords reforms 1999 6 Writings 7 Personal life 8 Arms 9 See also 10 References 11 Films about Lord Longford 12 Books about Lord Longford 13 External linksBackground and education editBorn in London to an Anglo Irish aristocratic family he was the second son of Thomas Pakenham 5th Earl of Longford in the Peerage of Ireland 13 He was educated at Eton College and New College Oxford 13 where as an undergraduate he was a member of the Bullingdon Club Despite having failed to be awarded a scholarship he graduated with a first class honours degree in Philosophy Politics and Economics and became a don at Christ Church Political career edit nbsp Pakenham at his wedding in 1931After a disastrous spell in stockbroking with Buckmaster amp Moore in 1931 the 25 year old Pakenham joined the Conservative Research Department where he developed education policy for the Conservative Party His wife Elizabeth persuaded him to become a socialist 14 They were married on 3 November 1931 and had eight children In 1940 only a few months after the onset of the Second World War he suffered a nervous breakdown and was invalided out of the armed forces 5 The same year he became a Roman Catholic 13 His wife was initially dismayed by this for she had been brought up a Unitarian and associated the Church of Rome with reactionary politics but in 1946 she joined the same church 15 During the war Pakenham was hired as an assistant for William Beveridge and was involved in the production of the Beveridge Report and the 1944 book Full Employment in a Free Society 13 Pakenham then embarked on a political career In July 1945 he contested Oxford against the sitting Conservative member Quintin Hogg but was defeated by nearly 3 000 votes 13 In October of that year he was created Baron Pakenham of Cowley in the City of Oxford in the Peerage of the United Kingdom 16 by the Labour government of Clement Attlee and took his seat in the House of Lords as one of the few Labour peers He was immediately appointed a Lord in waiting by Attlee In 1947 he was appointed deputy Foreign Secretary outside the cabinet with special responsibility for the British zone in occupied Germany He made headlines by telling German audiences that the British people forgave them for what had happened in the war at his death the Lord Bishop of Birmingham remarked that West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer was supposed to have counted him as one of the founders of the Federal Republic 17 In May 1948 he was moved to the lower profile role of Minister of Civil Aviation and was sworn of the Privy Council in June of that year He continued in this post until May 1951 From May until the fall of the administration in October 1951 he was First Lord of the Admiralty nbsp On television discussion series After Dark in 1988In 1961 Pakenham inherited from his brother the earldom of Longford in the Peerage of Ireland and from then onward was generally known to the public as Lord Longford When Labour returned to power in October 1964 under Harold Wilson Longford was appointed Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the House of Lords 18 despite the fact that Wilson had little respect for him 5 In December 1965 he became Secretary of State for the Colonies continuing as Leader of the House of Lords After only four months at the Colonial Office he was removed from the post for failing to master his brief citation needed and again became Lord Privy Seal in April 1966 Wilson often talked about sacking Longford from his government which is believed by some to have led to Longford s resignation as Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the House of Lords in January 1968 though the actual occasion of his resignation was the failure of Education Secretary Patrick Gordon Walker to agree to the raising of the school leaving age 5 19 In 1972 he was created a Knight Companion of the Garter 20 Penal reform editLongford began visiting prisoners in the 1930s when he was a city councillor in Oxford and continued to do so every week all around the country until shortly before his death in 2001 Among the thousands he befriended and helped were a small number of individuals who had committed the most notorious crimes including child murderer Myra Hindley In 1956 he set up New Bridge Foundation an organisation that aimed to help prisoners stay in touch with society and integrate them back into it 21 22 New Bridge set up Inside Time in 1990 the only national newspaper for the UK s prison population As of 2014 update novelist and journalist Rachel Billington Longford s daughter worked at the title one day a week 23 24 Longford organised many debates on prison reform in the House of Lords from the 1950s onward and in 1963 chaired the commission whose report recommended reform in sentencing policy and the establishment of a parole system 25 Longford was a leading figure in the Nationwide Festival of Light of 1971 protesting against the commercial exploitation of sex and violence and advocating the teaching of Christ as the key to recovering moral stability in the nation His anti pornography campaigning made him the subject of derision and he was labelled by the press as Lord Porn when he and former prison doctor Christine Temple Saville set out on a wide ranging tour of sex industry establishments in the early 1970s to compile a self funded report 13 The press made much of his visits to strip clubs in Copenhagen Peter Stanford wrote in The Guardian s obituary of Longford that in the late 1980s the peer was contacted by the solicitor for a young Dutchman convicted of a drugs offence sent to Albany prison on the Isle of Wight who was suffering from AIDS and had been cut off by his family Longford was the only person to visit the dying man a gesture repeated in countless episodes that never made headlines but which brought succour and relief 4 Myra Hindley edit He gained a reputation for eccentricity becoming known for his efforts to rehabilitate offenders and in particular campaigning for the parole and release from prison of the Moors murderer Myra Hindley who had been jailed for life along with Ian Brady in 1966 for the Moors Murders 13 Longford s support for Hindley led to the soubriquet Lord Wrongford from the tabloid press which largely opposed Hindley being released from prison It also coincided with Longford s contact with Hindley becoming public knowledge in 1972 26 when Lord Porn was in the midst of the debacle of a much lampooned anti pornography crusade against indecency giving rise to more allegations of hypocrisy than had already resulted from his tours of sex clubs In 1977 11 years after Hindley was convicted of two murders and being an accessory to a third murder Longford appeared on television and spoke openly of his belief that Hindley should now be considered for parole as she had shown clear signs of progress in prison and now served long enough for the Parole Board to assess her suitability for parole He also supported Hindley s claims that her role in the Moors Murders was merely that of an unwilling accessory rather than an active participant and that she had only taken part due to Brady s abuse and threats These claims were aired in the inaugural episode of Brass Tacks which featured arguments for and against Hindley being considered for parole Ann West the mother of Lesley Ann Downey spoke out against the suggestion of Hindley ever being paroled and openly told viewers that she would kill Hindley if she ever was released 27 In 1985 he condemned the Parole Board s decision not to consider Hindley s release for another five years as barbaric His campaign for Hindley continued even after she admitted to two more murders in 1986 which further strengthened media and public suspicion that Hindley s reported rehabilitation and remorse were nothing more than a ploy to boost her chances of gaining parole There was also widespread doubt regarding Hindley s claims that she had only taken part in the killings due to being bullied and blackmailed by Brady In 1990 Home Secretary David Waddington ruled that life should mean life for Hindley who had been told by earlier Home Secretaries and High Court judges that she would have to serve a minimum of 25 and then 30 years before being considered for parole Hindley was not informed of the decision until December 1994 following a High Court ruling that all life sentence prisoners had to be informed of their minimum sentences and Longford later expressed his disgust at this ruling comparing her imprisonment to that of Jews in Nazi Germany 28 By this time Hindley who had initially thought that having friends in high places could only help her cause had cut off all contact and communication with him now considering him a liability whose campaigning was little more than publicity seeking on his own behalf She did regain contact with him again following this however 29 The next three Home Secretaries all agreed with Waddington s ruling Hindley appealed against her whole life tariff in the High Court in December 1997 November 1998 and March 2000 but each appeal was rejected Longford maintained that she was a reformed character who was no longer a threat to society and had qualified for parole He regularly commented along with several other Hindley supporters that she was a political prisoner who was being kept in prison for votes to serve the interests of a succession of Home Secretaries and their respective governments Home Office files would later reveal that in 1975 Longford had also lobbied various government ministers including the Home Secretary Roy Jenkins on Brady s behalf as well This resulted in Brady obtaining special treatment while remaining in the prison hospital rather than being returned to the segregation unit This gave him access to adolescent youth custody inmates he was only removed from this privileged situation in 1982 after he was accused by several underage inmates of sexual assault Unlike Hindley Brady never wanted to be paroled from his life sentence and remained in custody for more than 50 years until his death in May 2017 at the age of 79 30 In March 1996 Longford backed up Hindley s claim in an Oxford University magazine that she was still in prison so that the Conservative government trailing in the opinion polls since the autumn of 1992 would win more votes This claim was met with anger by the mothers of two of the Moors Murders victims including Ann West who remained at the centre of the campaign to ensure that Hindley was never released and once again vowed to kill Hindley if she was set free 31 Longford regularly condemned the media especially The Sun newspaper for its exploitation of Ann West who frequently opposed any suggestion of Hindley being paroled often threatening to kill her if she was ever set free In 1986 Longford reportedly told Ann West that unless she forgave Hindley and Brady she would not go to heaven when she died He also commented that he was tremendously sorry for her but letting her decide Myra s fate would be ludicrous 32 Hindley died in November 2002 having never been paroled 33 The story of Longford s campaign to free Hindley was told in the Channel 4 film Longford in 2006 Longford was played by Jim Broadbent who won a BAFTA for his role and Hindley was played by Samantha Morton Decriminalisation of homosexuality editIn 1956 Longford launched the first Parliamentary debate in support of the Wolfenden Report which recommended the decriminalisation of private and consensual homosexual acts between men over the age of 21 He had been a staunch public supporter of Lord Montagu and his lover Peter Wildeblood after the two were jailed for breaking anti gay laws in the early 1950s and visited them regularly in prison 34 In the 1960s while continuing to support the decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales he nonetheless asserted that homosexuality was nauseating and that regardless of any change in the law it was utterly wrongful 35 He was of the belief that homosexuality was something that could be taught 36 In the mid 1980s Longford was a vocal supporter of the introduction of Section 28 by Margaret Thatcher s Conservative government and during the Parliamentary debates he stated his opinion that homosexuals are handicapped people 37 Section 28 became law in 1988 but Longford continued to support it and fought against its repeal when the new Labour government came to power in 1997 Section 28 was eventually repealed in 2003 two years after his death Longford s highly publicised condemnation of homosexuality in the late 1980s made him a target of comedian Julian Clary who often satirised him in his stage shows and television appearances 38 Longford also opposed any attempts to lower the age of consent for homosexual acts below 21 in 1977 and in 1994 he spoke against lowering it to 18 claiming that the years of 18 and 19 are the years when the destiny of young men may be decided for life and that people of that age could have too easily been seduced into a homosexual lifestyle in the early years of Tony Blair s government he criticized plans to equalise the age of consent for gay men at that time 18 with that of heterosexual men 16 remarking in a 1998 House of Lords debate that if someone seduced my daughter it would be damaging and horrifying but not fatal She would recover marry and have lots of children On the other hand if some elderly or not so elderly schoolmaster seduced one of my sons and taught him to be a homosexual he would ruin him for life That is the fundamental distinction 39 He was ultimately unsuccessful on those counts as the age of consent for gay men ended up being lowered to 18 in 1994 and ultimately to 16 in 2001 House of Lords reforms 1999 editUnder the House of Lords Act 1999 the majority of hereditary peers lost the privilege of a seat and right to vote in the House of Lords However Longford was one of four individuals who were hereditary peers of the first creation in his case 1st Baron Pakenham As such he was created a life peer and remained in the Lords as Baron Pakenham of Cowley of Cowley in the County of Oxfordshire 40 At the age of 93 he became the second oldest person to be granted a peerage after Lord Maenan Writings editKnown for his interest in Irish history he wrote a number of books on the topic Peace By Ordeal An Account from First Hand Sources of the Negotiation and Signature of the Anglo Irish Treaty of 1921 published in 1935 is arguably his best known work It documents the negotiations of the Anglo Irish Treaty of 1921 between Irish and British representatives His account uses primary sources from the time many however anonymous Commentators differ widely on its merits and reliability 41 42 Longford came greatly to admire Eamon de Valera and was chosen as the co author of his official biography Eamon de Valera which was published in 1970 co written with Thomas P O Neill He campaigned for decades to have the Hugh Lane bequest pictures restored to Dublin and with Lord Moyne and Sir Denis Mahon brokered a compromise sharing agreement in 1959 43 Personal life editAt Oxford Longford met his wife Elizabeth Harman an undergraduate at Lady Margaret Hall Their marriage produced four sons and four daughters followed by 26 grandchildren and 18 great grandchildren Lady Antonia Margaret Caroline Pakenham b 27 August 1932 writer previously married to Hugh Fraser and had six children was married to Harold Pinter until his death Thomas Frank Dermot Pakenham 8th Earl of Longford b 14 August 1933 historian married with issue four children Hon Patrick Maurice Pakenham 17 April 1937 8 June 2005 44 barrister married Mary Plummer three children Judith Elizabeth Pakenham 14 August 1940 18 September 2018 writer previously married to Alexander John Kazantzis two children Lady Rachel Mary Pakenham b 11 April 1942 writer married to director Kevin Billington four children Hon Sir Michael Aidan Pakenham b 3 November 1943 diplomat married to Meta Landreth Doak two children Lady Catherine Rose Pakenham 28 February 1946 11 August 1969 journalist died in a car accident unmarried Hon Kevin John Toussaint Pakenham 45 1 November 1947 19 July 2020 banker 46 married to Ruth Jackson 47 then Claire Hoare then Ronke Phillips six children 48 Longford died from heart failure at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital on 3 August 2001 at the age of 95 and was cremated at Mortlake Crematorium 13 49 His wife Elizabeth Pakenham Countess of Longford died in October 2002 at the age of 96 50 She was the author of Victoria R I 1964 a biography of Queen Victoria published in the US as Born to Succeed She also wrote a two volume biography of the Duke of Wellington and a volume of memoirs The Pebbled Shore She stood for Parliament as Labour candidate for Cheltenham in the 1935 general election and for Oxford in 1950 The then Prime Minister Tony Blair said of Longford after his death He was a great man of passionate integrity and humanity and a great reformer committed to modernising the law while also caring deeply for individuals 9 Arms editCoat of arms of Frank Pakenham 7th Earl of Longford KG PC nbsp Coronet An Earl s Coronet Crest Out of a mural crown Or a demi eagle displayed Gules beaked Or Escutcheon Quarterly Or and Gules in dexter chief an eagle displayed Vert Supporters Dexter a lion Azure charged on the shoulder with an escarbuncle Or sinister a griffin Azure winged Ermine beaked and membered Or Motto GLORIA VIRTUTIS UMBRASee also editThe Longford Lectures The Longford PrizeReferences edit Inherited the Earldom of Longford on 4 February 1961 Hoge Warren 6 August 2001 Lord Longford Champion of Eccentric Causes Dies at 95 The New York Times Retrieved 9 March 2015 Longford Prize longfordtrust org a b Stanford Peter Obituary Lord Longford The Guardian London a b c d Stanford Peter 6 August 2001 Lord Longford The Guardian London Retrieved 23 October 2013 PORNOGRAPHY THE LONGFORD REPORT Hansard 29 November 1972 The Longford Report 23 Sep 1972 the Spectator Archive Walker Andrew 19 October 2006 The saint and the sinner BBC News a b Campaigning Lord Longford dies cnn com 3 August 2001 Aitken Jonathan 2007 Heroes and Contemporaries Continuum a b Stanford Peter 7 July 2003 Dangerous Liaison The Telegraph Smith Anna Marie 1994 New Right Discourse on Race and Sexuality Britain 1968 1990 Cambridge University Press p 205 Earl of Longford homosexuality a b c d e f g h Johnson Paul 2011 Pakenham Francis Aungier Frank first Baron Pakenham and seventh earl of Longford 1905 2001 politician writer and philanthropist Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 76133 Subscription or UK public library membership required Campaigner Lord Longford dies BBC News 3 August 2001 Retrieved on 31 March 2007 Craig Mary Longford A Biographical Portrait Hodder amp Stoughton 1978 pp 59 61 No 37305 The London Gazette 12 October 1945 p 5026 UK Parliament House of Lords House of Lords Volume 627 15 October 2001 Peering at the Catholic lords Catholic Herald 18 January 1985 Mary Craig Longford A Biographical Portrait Hodder amp Stoughton 1978 pp 149 No 45349 The London Gazette 23 April 1971 p 4083 Stanford Peter Looking for a Way Out The Independent 20 July 2003 retrieved on 31 March 2007 ABOUT US New Bridge Foundation Archived from the original on 27 November 2014 Retrieved 16 November 2014 Inside Story Prison media The Independent 18 February 2008 Retrieved 16 November 2014 Billington Rachel November 2014 Month by Month Inside Time Newspaper Crime a challenge to us all report of the Labour Party Study Group Chairman Lord Longford London Labour Party Study Group 1964 Smith David with Lee Carol Ann 2011 Witness The Story of David Smith Chief Prosecution Witness in the Moors Murders Case Mainstream Publishing Company p Chapter 22 ISBN 9781845968151 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Brass Tacks Freedom for Myra Hindley Brass Tacks 6 July 1977 Archived from the original on 18 October 2020 Case for release of Myra Hindley From Mr David L Astor and Lord Longford The Times 13 December 1994 Staff Duncan 13 October 2006 Dangerous Liaison The Guardian How Moors murderer Brady had access to vulnerable teens in jail BBC News 26 June 2019 Hindley votes claim lashed thefreelibrary com Retrieved 23 March 2016 Why Myra must never be freed Scots detective who arrested evil Hindley ends 30 year silence bernardomahoney com 23 March 2016 Archived from the original on 9 December 2008 With release in sight and after 36 years in jail Myra Hindley dies The Guardian 15 November 2002 Stanford Peter 2003 The Outcast s Outcast A Biography of Lord Longford Stroud Sutton Publishing pp 512 pp ISBN 0 7509 3248 1 Galloway Bruce Prejudice and Pride Discrimination Against Gay People in Modern Britain Routledge amp Keegan Paul Publishing 1983 page 85 Nigel Warner Baker Paul 2005 Public Discourses of Gay Men Routledge Workers Liberty workersliberty org Julian Clary The Mincing Machine Tour Virgin Video Media 1989 Stonewall website Sexual Offences Amendment Bill 1999 Parliamentary Briefing page 11 No 55672 The London Gazette 19 November 1999 p 12349 Wilkinson Burke 1985 The Zeal of the Convert the Life of Erskin Childers Second Chance Press p 241 ISBN 978 0 933256 53 8 Michael Collins Soldier and Statesman by Piaras Beaslai Dublin 1937 Appendix pp 414 420 Foster Roy 30 May 2015 How Ireland was robbed of Hugh Lane s great art collection The Guardian Obituaries Patrick Pakenham The Daily Telegraph 22 June 2005 Hon Kevin John Toussaint Pakenham National Portrait Gallery London Retrieved 5 August 2020 Team Kevin Pakenham pakenhampartners com Archived from the original on 23 December 2018 Retrieved 29 March 2016 Ruth Lesley Pakenham nee Jackson National Portrait Gallery London Retrieved 5 August 2020 Kevin Pakenham obituary The Times Retrieved 5 August 2020 Mortlake Crematorium PDF On Kew Spring 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 12 December 2013 Bradford Sarah 24 October 2002 The Countess of Longford The Independent London Archived from the original on 6 July 2009 Retrieved 22 October 2008 Films about Lord Longford editLongford 2006 Longford s efforts to obtain parole for Moors murderer Myra Hindley were dramatised in a Channel 4 film with Longford portrayed by Jim Broadbent Samantha Morton as Myra Hindley Lindsay Duncan as Lady Longford and Andy Serkis as Ian Brady Books about Lord Longford editStanford Peter 2003 The Outcast s Outcast A Biography of Lord Longford Stroud UK Sutton Publishing pp 512 ISBN 0 7509 3248 1 Fraser Antonia 2015 My History A Memoir of Growing Up New York Doubleday Account both personal and political by a daughter of Pakenham External links editPortraits of Frank Pakenham 7th Earl of Longford at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Longford Trust New Bridge Foundation Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by the Earl of Longford Campaigner Lord Longford dies BBC News article dated Friday 3 August 2001 Lord Longford Aristocratic moral crusader BBC News obituary dated Friday 3 August 2001 Tributes to humanist peer BBC News article dated Friday 3 August 2001 Lord Longford Guardian obituary by Peter Stanford dated Monday 6 August 2001 Announcement of his taking the oath for the first time as Lord Pakenham of Cowley House of Lords Minute of Proceedings 17 November 1999 Recognition of his work on the Hugh Lane bequest Newspaper clippings about Frank Pakenham 7th Earl of Longford in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Portrait of Frank Pakenham in the UK Parliamentary CollectionsPolitical officesNew titleNew government Lord in waiting1945 1946 Succeeded byThe Lord ChorleyPreceded byJohn Hynd Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster1947 1948 Succeeded byHugh DaltonPreceded byThe Lord Nathan Minister of Civil Aviation1948 1951 Succeeded byThe Lord OgmorePreceded byThe Viscount Hall First Lord of the Admiralty1951 Succeeded byJames ThomasPreceded byThe Lord Carrington Leader of the House of Lords1964 1968 Succeeded byThe Lord ShackletonPreceded bySelwyn Lloyd Lord Privy Seal1964 1965 Succeeded bySir Frank SoskicePreceded byAnthony Greenwood Secretary of State for the Colonies1965 1966 Succeeded byFrederick LeePreceded bySir Frank Soskice Lord Privy Seal1966 1968 Succeeded byThe Lord ShackletonParty political officesPreceded byThe Earl Alexander of Hillsborough Leader of the Labour Party in the House of Lords1964 1968 Succeeded byThe Lord ShackletonPeerage of IrelandPreceded byEdward Pakenham Earl of Longford1961 2001 Succeeded byThomas PakenhamPeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Baron Pakenham1945 2001 Member of the House of Lords 1945 2001 Succeeded byThomas Pakenham Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frank Pakenham 7th Earl of Longford amp oldid 1195610826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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