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Harold Macmillan

Maurice Harold Macmillan, 1st Earl of Stockton, OM, PC, FRS (10 February 1894 – 29 December 1986) was a British statesman and Conservative politician who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1957 to 1963.[1] Nicknamed "Supermac", he was known for his pragmatism, wit, and unflappability.

The Earl of Stockton
Official portrait, 1959
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
In office
10 January 1957 – 18 October 1963
MonarchElizabeth II
First SecretaryRab Butler (1962–63)
Preceded byAnthony Eden
Succeeded byAlec Douglas-Home
Leader of the Conservative Party
In office
10 January 1957 – 18 October 1963
Preceded byAnthony Eden
Succeeded byAlec Douglas-Home
Ministerial offices
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
20 December 1955 – 13 January 1957
Prime MinisterAnthony Eden
Preceded byRab Butler
Succeeded byPeter Thorneycroft
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
In office
7 April 1955 – 20 December 1955
Prime MinisterAnthony Eden
Preceded byAnthony Eden
Succeeded bySelwyn Lloyd
Minister of Defence
In office
19 October 1954 – 7 April 1955
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded byThe Earl Alexander of Tunis
Succeeded bySelwyn Lloyd
Minister of Housing and Local Government
In office
30 October 1951 – 19 October 1954
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded byHugh Dalton
Succeeded byDuncan Sandys
Secretary of State for Air
In office
25 May 1945 – 26 July 1945
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded byArchibald Sinclair
Succeeded byThe Viscount Stansgate
Minister Resident in Northwest Africa
In office
30 December 1942 – 25 May 1945
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byHarold Balfour
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies
In office
4 February 1942 – 30 December 1942
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded byGeorge Hall
Succeeded byThe Duke of Devonshire
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Supply
In office
15 May 1940 – 4 February 1942
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded byJohn Llewellin
Succeeded byThe Viscount Portal
Parliamentary offices
Member of the House of Lords
Hereditary peerage
24 February 1984 – 29 December 1986
Succeeded byThe 2nd Earl of Stockton
Member of Parliament
for Bromley
In office
14 November 1945 – 25 September 1964
Preceded byEdward Campbell
Succeeded byJohn Hunt
Member of Parliament
for Stockton-on-Tees
In office
27 October 1931 – 15 June 1945
Preceded byFrederick Fox Riley
Succeeded byGeorge Chetwynd
In office
29 October 1924 – 10 May 1929
Preceded byRobert Strother Stewart
Succeeded byFrederick Fox Riley
Academic offices
Chancellor of the University of Oxford
In office
3 March 1960 – 18 December 1986
Preceded byEdward Wood
Succeeded byRoy Jenkins
Personal details
Born
Maurice Harold Macmillan

(1894-02-10)10 February 1894
London, England
Died29 December 1986(1986-12-29) (aged 92)
Horsted Keynes, West Sussex, England
Resting placeSt Giles' Church, Horsted Keynes, West Sussex, England
Political partyConservative
Spouse
(m. 1920; died 1966)
Children4, including Maurice and Caroline
Alma materBalliol College, Oxford
Occupation
Civilian awards
Signature
Military service
Branch/serviceBritish Army
Years of service1914–1920
RankCaptain
UnitGrenadier Guards
Battles/wars
Military awards

Macmillan was badly injured as an infantry officer during the First World War. He suffered pain and partial immobility for the rest of his life. After the war he joined his family book-publishing business, then entered Parliament at the 1924 general election. Losing his seat in 1929, he regained it in 1931, soon after which he spoke out against the high rate of unemployment in Stockton-on-Tees. He opposed the appeasement of Germany practised by the Conservative government. He rose to high office during the Second World War as a protégé of Prime Minister Winston Churchill. In the 1950s Macmillan served as Foreign Secretary and Chancellor of the Exchequer under Anthony Eden.

When Eden resigned in 1957 following the Suez Crisis, Macmillan succeeded him as prime minister and Leader of the Conservative Party. He was a One Nation Tory of the Disraelian tradition and supported the post-war consensus. He supported the welfare state and the necessity of a mixed economy with some nationalised industries and strong trade unions. He championed a Keynesian strategy of deficit spending to maintain demand and pursuit of corporatist policies to develop the domestic market as the engine of growth. Benefiting from favourable international conditions,[2] he presided over an age of affluence, marked by low unemployment and high—if uneven—growth. In his speech of July 1957 he told the nation it had 'never had it so good',[3] but warned of the dangers of inflation, summing up the fragile prosperity of the 1950s.[4] He led the Conservatives to success in 1959 with an increased majority.

In international affairs, Macmillan worked to rebuild the Special Relationship with the United States from the wreckage of the 1956 Suez Crisis (of which he had been one of the architects), and facilitated the decolonisation of Africa. Reconfiguring the nation's defences to meet the realities of the nuclear age, he ended National Service, strengthened the nuclear forces by acquiring Polaris, and pioneered the Nuclear Test Ban with the United States and the Soviet Union. After the Skybolt Crisis undermined the Anglo-American strategic relationship, he sought a more active role for Britain in Europe, but his unwillingness to disclose United States nuclear secrets to France contributed to a French veto of the United Kingdom's entry into the European Economic Community.[5] Near the end of his premiership, his government was rocked by the Vassall and Profumo scandals, which to cultural conservatives and supporters of opposing parties alike seemed to symbolise moral decay of the British establishment.[6] Following his resignation, Macmillan lived out a long retirement as an elder statesman, being an active member of the House of Lords in his final years. He died in December 1986 at the age of 92.

Early life edit

Family edit

Macmillan was born on 10 February 1894, at 52 Cadogan Place in Chelsea, London, to Maurice Crawford Macmillan, a publisher, and the former Helen (Nellie) Artie Tarleton Belles, an artist and socialite from Spencer, Indiana.[7] He had two brothers, Daniel, eight years his senior, and Arthur, four years his senior.[8] His paternal grandfather, Daniel MacMillan, who founded Macmillan Publishers, was the son of a Scottish crofter from the Isle of Arran.[9] Macmillan considered himself a Scot.[10]

Education and early political views edit

Macmillan received an intensive early education, closely guided by his American mother. He learned French at home every morning from a succession of nursery maids, and exercised daily at Mr Macpherson's Gymnasium and Dancing Academy, around the corner from the family home.[11] From the age of six or seven he received introductory lessons in classical Latin and Greek at Mr Gladstone's day school, close by in Sloane Square.[12][13]

Macmillan attended Summer Fields School, Oxford (1903–06). He was Third Scholar at Eton College,[14] but his time there (1906–10) was blighted by recurrent illness, starting with a near-fatal attack of pneumonia in his first half; he missed his final year after being invalided out,[15][16] and was taught at home by private tutors (1910–11), notably Ronald Knox, who did much to instil his High Church Anglicanism.[17] He won an exhibition (scholarship) to Balliol College, Oxford.[14]

In his youth, he was an admirer of the policies and leadership of a succession of Liberal prime ministers, starting with Henry Campbell-Bannerman, who came to power when Macmillan was 11 years old, and then H. H. Asquith, whom he later described as having "intellectual sincerity and moral nobility", and particularly of Asquith's successor, David Lloyd George, whom he regarded as a "man of action", likely to accomplish his goals.[18][page needed]

Macmillan went up to Balliol College in 1912, where he joined many political societies. His political opinions at this stage were an eclectic mix of moderate conservatism, moderate liberalism and Fabian socialism. He read avidly about Disraeli, but was also particularly impressed by a speech by Lloyd George at the Oxford Union Society in 1913, where he had become a member. Macmillan was a protégé of the president of the Union Society Walter Monckton, later a Cabinet colleague; as such, he became secretary then junior treasurer (elected unopposed in March 1914, then an unusual occurrence) of the Union, and would in his biographers' view "almost certainly" have been president had the war not intervened.[19][20] He obtained a First in Honour Moderations, informally known as 'Mods' (consisting of Latin and Greek, the first half of the four-year Oxford Literae Humaniores course, informally known as 'Classics'), in 1914. With his final exams over two years away, he enjoyed an idyllic Trinity term at Oxford, just before the outbreak of the First World War.[21]

War service edit

Volunteering as soon as war was declared, Macmillan was commissioned as a temporary second lieutenant in the King's Royal Rifle Corps on 19 November 1914.[22][23] Promoted to lieutenant on 30 January 1915,[24] he soon transferred to the Grenadier Guards.[25] He fought on the front lines in France, where the casualty rate was high, including the probability of an "early and violent death".[18][page needed] He served with distinction and was wounded on three occasions. Shot in the right hand and receiving a glancing bullet wound to the head in the Battle of Loos in September 1915, Macmillan was sent to Lennox Gardens in Chelsea for hospital treatment, then joined a reserve battalion at Chelsea Barracks from January to March 1916, until his hand had healed. He then returned to the front lines in France. Leading an advance platoon in the Battle of Flers–Courcelette (part of the Battle of the Somme) in September 1916, he was severely wounded, and lay for over twelve hours in a shell hole, sometimes feigning death when Germans passed, and reading Aeschylus in the original Greek.[26] Raymond Asquith, eldest son of the prime minister, was a brother officer in Macmillan's regiment and was killed that month.[27]

Macmillan spent the final two years of the war in hospital undergoing a series of operations.[28] He was still on crutches at the Armistice of 11 November 1918.[29] His hip wound took four years to heal completely, and he was left with a slight shuffle to his walk and a limp grip in his right hand from his previous wound, which affected his handwriting.[30]

Macmillan saw himself as both a "gownsman" and a "swordsman" and would later display open contempt for other politicians (e.g. Rab Butler, Hugh Gaitskell, Harold Wilson) who, often through no fault of their own, had not seen military service in either World War.[31]

Canadian aide-de-campship edit

Of the scholars and exhibitioners of his year, only he and one other survived the war.[32] As a result, he refused to return to Oxford to complete his degree, saying the university would never be the same;[33] in later years he joked that he had been "sent down by the Kaiser".[34]

Owing to the impending contraction of the Army after the war, a regular commission in the Grenadiers was out of the question.[35] However, at the end of 1918 Macmillan joined the Guards Reserve Battalion at Chelsea Barracks for "light duties".[36] On one occasion he had to command reliable troops in a nearby park as a unit of Guardsmen was briefly refusing to reembark for France, although the incident was resolved peacefully. The incident prompted an inquiry from the War Office as to whether the Guards Reserve Battalion "could be relied on".[37]

Macmillan then served in Ottawa, Canada, in 1919 as aide-de-camp (ADC) to Victor Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire, then Governor General of Canada, and his future father-in-law.[38] The engagement of Captain Macmillan to the Duke's daughter Lady Dorothy was announced on 7 January 1920.[39] He relinquished his commission on 1 April 1920.[40] As was common for contemporary former officers, he continued to be known as 'Captain Macmillan' until the early 1930s and was listed as such in every general election between 1923 and 1931.[41] As late as his North African posting of 1942–43 he reminded Churchill that he held the rank of captain in the Guards reserve.[42]

Macmillan Publishers edit

On his return to London in 1920 he joined the family publishing firm Macmillan Publishers as a junior partner. In 1936, Harold and his brother Daniel took control of the firm, with the former focusing on the political and non-fiction side of the business.[18][page needed] Harold resigned from the company on appointment to ministerial office in 1940. He resumed working with the firm from 1945 to 1951 when the party was in opposition.

Personal life edit

According to Michael Bloch, there have long been rumours that Macmillan was expelled from Eton for homosexuality. Macmillan's biographer D. R. Thorpe is of the view that he was removed by his mother when she discovered that he was being "used" by older boys.[43] Dick Leonard reports that Alistair Horne refers to "inevitable rumours" and that "he left for the 'usual reasons' for boys to be expelled from public schools".[44]

Marriage edit

Macmillan married Lady Dorothy Cavendish, the daughter of the 9th Duke of Devonshire, on 21 April 1920. Her great-uncle was Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire, who was leader of the Liberal Party in the 1870s, and a close colleague of William Ewart Gladstone, Joseph Chamberlain and Lord Salisbury. Lady Dorothy was also descended from William Cavendish, 4th Duke of Devonshire, who served as Prime Minister from 1756 to 1757 in communion with Newcastle and Pitt the Elder. Her nephew William Cavendish, Marquess of Hartington, married Kathleen Kennedy, a sister of John F. Kennedy.

In 1929, Lady Dorothy began a lifelong affair with the Conservative politician Robert Boothby, an arrangement that scandalised high society but remained unknown to the general public.[45] Philip Frere, a partner in Frere Cholmely solicitors, urged Macmillan not to divorce his wife, which at that time would have been fatal to a public career even for the "innocent party". Macmillan and Lady Dorothy lived largely separate lives in private thereafter.[46] The stress caused by that may have contributed to Macmillan's nervous breakdown in 1931.[47] He was often treated with condescension by his aristocratic in-laws and was observed to be a sad and isolated figure at Chatsworth in the 1930s.[48] John Campbell suggests that Macmillan's humiliation was first a major cause of his odd and rebellious behaviour in the 1930s then, in subsequent decades, made him a harder and more ruthless politician than his rivals Eden and Butler.[49]

The Macmillans had four children:

Lady Dorothy died on 21 May 1966, aged 65.

In old age, Macmillan was a close friend of Ava Anderson, Viscountess Waverley, née Bodley, the widow of John Anderson, 1st Viscount Waverley.[50] Eileen O'Casey, née Reynolds, the actress wife of Irish dramatist Seán O'Casey, was another female friend, Macmillan publishing her husband's plays. Although she is said to have replaced Lady Dorothy in Macmillan's affections, there is disagreement over how intimate they became after the deaths of their respective spouses, and whether he proposed.[51][52][53][54]

Political career, 1924–1951 edit

Member of Parliament (1924–1929) edit

Macmillan contested the depressed northern industrial constituency of Stockton-on-Tees in 1923. The campaign cost him about £200-£300 out of his own pocket;[55] at that time candidates were often expected to fund their own election campaigns. The collapse in the Liberal vote let him win in 1924.[56] In 1927, four MPs, including Boothby and Macmillan, published a short book advocating radical measures.[56] In 1928, Macmillan was described by his political hero, and now Parliamentary colleague, David Lloyd George, as a "born rebel".[18][page needed][57]

Macmillan lost his seat in 1929 in the face of high regional unemployment. He almost became Conservative candidate for the safe seat of Hitchin in 1931.[58] However the sitting MP, Guy Kindersley cancelled his retirement plans, in part because of his own association with the anti-Baldwin rebels and his suspicion of Macmillan's sympathy for Oswald Mosley's promises of radical measures to reduce unemployment. Instead, the resignation of the new candidate at Stockton allowed Macmillan to be re-selected there, and he returned to the House of Commons for his old seat in 1931.[57]

Member of Parliament (1931–1939) edit

Macmillan spent the 1930s on the backbenches. In March 1932 he published "The State and Industry" (not to be confused with his earlier pamphlet "Industry and the State").[59] In September 1932 he made his first visit to the USSR.[60] Macmillan also published "The Next Step". He advocated cheap money and state direction of investment. In 1933 he was the sole author of "Reconstruction: A Plea for a National Unity". In 1935 he was one of 15 MPs to write "Planning for Employment". His next publication, "The Next Five Years", was overshadowed by Lloyd George's proposed "New Deal" in 1935.[59] Macmillan Press also published the work of the economist John Maynard Keynes.[56]

Macmillan resigned the government whip (but not the Conservative party one) in protest at the lifting of sanctions on Italy after her conquest of Abyssinia.[61] "Chips" Channon described him as the "unprepossessing, bookish, eccentric member for Stockton-on-Tees" and recorded (8 July 1936) that he had been sent a "frigid note" by Conservative Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin. Baldwin later mentioned that he had survived by steering a middle course between Harold Macmillan and John Gretton, an extreme right-winger.[62]

The Next Five Years Group, to which Macmillan had belonged, was wound up in November 1937. His book The Middle Way appeared in June 1938, advocating a broadly centrist political philosophy both domestically and internationally. Macmillan took control of the magazine New Outlook and made sure it published political tracts rather than purely theoretical work.[59]

In 1936, Macmillan proposed the creation of a cross-party forum of antifascists to create democratic unity but his ideas were rejected by the leadership of both the Labour and Conservative parties.[63]

Macmillan supported Chamberlain's first flight for talks with Hitler at Berchtesgaden, but not his subsequent flights to Bad Godesberg and Munich. After Munich he was looking for a "1931 in reverse", i.e. a Labour-dominated coalition in which some Conservatives would serve, the reverse of the Conservative-dominated coalition which had governed Britain since 1931.[64] He supported the independent candidate, Lindsay, at the 1938 Oxford by-election. He wrote a pamphlet "The Price of Peace" calling for alliance between Britain, France and the USSR, but expecting Poland to make territorial "accommodation" to Germany (i.e. give up the Danzig corridor). In "Economic Aspects of Defence", early in 1939, he called for a Ministry of Supply.[65]

Phoney War (1939–1940) edit

Macmillan visited Finland in February 1940, then the subject of great sympathy in Britain as it was being invaded by the USSR, then loosely allied to Nazi Germany. His last speech from the backbenches was to attack the government for not doing enough to help Finland. Britain was saved from a potentially embarrassing commitment when the Winter War ended in March 1940.[66]

Macmillan voted against the Government in the Norway Debate of May 1940, helping to bring down Neville Chamberlain as Prime Minister, and tried to join in with Colonel Josiah Wedgwood singing "Rule, Britannia!" in the House of Commons Chamber.[67]

Parliamentary Secretary, Ministry of Supply (1940–1942) edit

Macmillan at last attained office by serving in the wartime coalition government as the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Supply from 1940. Channon commented (29 May 1940) that there was "some amusement over Harold Macmillan's so obvious enjoyment of his new position".[68]

Macmillan's job was to provide armaments and other equipment to the British Army and Royal Air Force. He travelled up and down the country to co-ordinate production, working with some success under Lord Beaverbrook to increase the supply and quality of armoured vehicles.[69]

Colonial Under-Secretary (1942) edit

 
Macmillan in 1942

Macmillan was appointed Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies in 1942, in his own words "leaving a madhouse to enter a mausoleum".[70] Though a junior minister he was a member of the Privy Council, and he spoke in the House of Commons for Colonial Secretaries Lord Moyne and Lord Cranborne. Macmillan was given responsibility for increasing colonial production and trade, and signalled the future policy direction when in June 1942 he declared:

The governing principle of the Colonial Empire should be the principle of partnership between the various elements composing it. Out of partnership comes understanding and friendship. Within the fabric of the Commonwealth lies the future of the Colonial territories.[71]

Macmillan predicted that the Conservatives faced landslide defeat after the war, causing Channon to write (6 Sep 1944) of "the foolish prophecy of that nice ass Harold Macmillan". In October 1942 Harold Nicolson recorded Macmillan as predicting "extreme socialism" after the war.[72] Macmillan nearly resigned when Oliver Stanley was appointed Secretary of State in November 1942, as he would no longer be the spokesman in the Commons as he had been under Cranborne. Brendan Bracken advised him not to quit.[73]

Minister Resident in the Mediterranean (1942–1945) edit

After Harry Crookshank had refused the job, Macmillan attained real power and Cabinet rank late in 1942 as British Minister Resident at Algiers in the Mediterranean, recently liberated in Operation Torch. He reported directly to the Prime Minister instead of to the Foreign Secretary, Anthony Eden. Oliver Lyttelton had a similar job at Cairo, while Robert Murphy was Macmillan's US counterpart.[73] Macmillan built a rapport with US General Dwight D. Eisenhower, then Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean (SACMED), which proved helpful in his career,[74] and Richard Crossman later recalled that Macmillan's "Greeks in the Roman Empire" metaphor dated from this time (i.e., that as the US replaced Britain as the world's leading power, British politicians and diplomats should aim to guide her in the same way that Greek slaves and freedmen had advised powerful Romans).[75] Macmillan told Crossman: "We, my dear Crossman, are the Greeks in the American empire. You will find the Americans much as the Greeks found the Romans—great big, vulgar bustling people, more vigorous than we are and also more idle, with more unspoiled virtues, but also more corrupt. We must run AFHQ (Allied Forces Headquarters) as the Greek slaves ran the operations of the Emperor Claudius".[76] At the Casablanca Conference Macmillan helped to secure US acceptance, if not recognition, of the Free French leader Charles de Gaulle.[77] Macmillan wrote in his diary during the Casablanca conference: "I christened the two personalities the Emperor of the East and the Emperor of the West and indeed it was rather like a meeting of the late Roman empire".[76] For Macmillan, the "remarkable and romantic episodes" as President Roosevelt met Prime Minister Churchill in Casablanca convinced him that personal diplomacy was the best way to deal with Americans, which later influenced his foreign policy as prime minister.[78]

On 22 February 1943, Macmillan was badly burned in a plane crash,[79] trying to climb back into the plane to rescue a Frenchman. He had to have a plaster cast put on his face. In his delirium he imagined himself back in a Somme casualty clearing station and asked for a message to be passed to his mother, now dead.[80]

 
Macmillan (top row, left) with Allied military leaders in the Sicilian campaign, 1943; Maj-Gen Bedell Smith to his left. Front Row: General Eisenhower (then Supreme Commander, Mediterranean), Air Chief Marshal Tedder, General Alexander, Admiral Cunningham

Together with Gladwyn Jebb he helped to negotiate the Italian armistice in August 1943, between the fall of Sicily and the Salerno Landings. This caused friction with Eden and the Foreign Office.[81] He was based at Caserta for the rest of the war. He was appointed UK High Commissioner for the Advisory Council for Italy late in 1943.[82] He visited London in October 1943 and again clashed with Eden. Eden appointed Duff Cooper as Representative to the Free French government in Algeria (after the liberation of mainland France, he later continued as Ambassador to France from November 1944) and Noel Charles as Ambassador to Italy to reduce Macmillan's influence.[83] In May 1944 Macmillan infuriated Eden by demanding an early peace treaty with Italy (at that time a pro-Allied regime under Badoglio held some power in the southern, liberated, part of Italy), a move which Churchill favoured. In June 1944 he argued for a British-led thrust up the Ljubljana Gap into Central Europe (Operation "Armpit") instead of the planned diversion of US and Free French forces to the South of France (Operation Dragoon). This proposal impressed Churchill and General Alexander, but did not meet with American approval. Eden sent out Robert Dixon to abolish the job of Resident Minister, there being then no job for Macmillan back in the UK, but he managed to prevent his job being abolished. Churchill visited Italy in August 1944. On 14 September 1944 Macmillan was appointed Chief Commissioner of the Allied Control Commission for Italy (in succession to General Noel Mason-MacFarlane). He continued to be British Minister Resident at Allied Headquarters and British political adviser to "Jumbo" Wilson, now Supreme Commander, Mediterranean. On 10 November 1944 he was appointed Acting President of the Allied Commission (the Supreme Commander being President).[84]

Macmillan visited Greece on 11 December 1944. As the Germans had withdrawn, British troops under General Scobie had deployed to Athens, but there were concerns that the pro-communist Greek resistance, EAM and its military wing ELAS, would take power (see Dekemvriana) or come into conflict with British troops. Macmillan rode in a tank and was under sniper fire at the British Embassy. Despite the hostility of large sections of British and American opinion, who were sympathetic to the guerrillas and hostile to what was seen as imperialist behaviour, he persuaded a reluctant Churchill, who visited Athens later in the month, to accept Archbishop Damaskinos as Regent on behalf of the exiled King George II. A truce was negotiated in January 1945, enabling a pro-British regime to remain in power, as Churchill had demanded in the Percentages agreement the previous autumn.[85] In 1947 the US would take over Britain's role as "protector" of Greece and Turkey, to keep the Soviets out of the Mediterranean, the so-called "Truman Doctrine".

Macmillan was also the minister advising General Keightley of V Corps, the senior Allied commander in Austria responsible for Operation Keelhaul, which included the forced repatriation of up to 70,000 prisoners of war to the Soviet Union and Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslavia in 1945. The deportations and Macmillan's involvement later became a source of controversy because of the harsh treatment meted out to Nazi collaborators and anti-partisans by the receiving countries, and because in the confusion V Corps went beyond the terms agreed at Yalta and Allied Forces Headquarters directives by repatriating 4000 White Russian troops and 11,000 civilian family members.[86][87][88]

Air Secretary (1945) edit

Macmillan toyed with an offer to succeed Duff Cooper as MP for the safe Conservative seat of Westminster St George's.[58] Criticised locally for his long absence, he suggested that Lady Dorothy stand for Stockton in 1945, as she had been nursing the seat for five years. She was apparently willing. However, it was thought better for him to be seen to defend his seat, and Lord Beaverbrook had already spoken to Churchill to arrange that Macmillan be given another seat in the event of defeat.[89]

Macmillan returned to England after the European war, feeling himself 'almost a stranger at home'.[90] He was Secretary of State for Air for two months in Churchill's caretaker government, 'much of which was taken up in electioneering', there being 'nothing much to be done in the way of forward planning'.[91]

Opposition (1945–1951) edit

Macmillan indeed lost Stockton in the landslide Labour victory of July 1945, but returned to Parliament in the November 1945 by-election in Bromley. In his diary Harold Nicolson noted the feelings of the Tory backbenchers: "They feel that Winston is too old and Anthony (Eden) too weak. They want Harold Macmillan to lead them."[92]

He was a member of the British delegation to the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe from 1949 to 1951, and played a prominent role — as a key aide and ally of Winston Churchill — in pressing for greater European integration as a bulwark against Soviet totalitarianism and to prevent a recurrence of the horrors of Nazi rule.

Although Macmillan played an important role in drafting the "Industrial Charter" ("Crossbencher" in the Sunday Express called it the second edition of The Middle Way) he now, as MP for a safe seat, adopted a somewhat more right-wing public persona, defending private enterprise and fiercely opposing the Labour government in the House of Commons.[93]

Political career, 1951–1957 edit

Housing Minister (1951–1954) edit

With the Conservative victory in 1951 Macmillan became Minister of Housing & Local Government under Churchill, who entrusted him with fulfilling the pledge to build 300,000 houses per year (up from the previous target of 200,000 a year), made in response to a speech from the floor at the 1950 Party Conference. Macmillan thought at first that Housing, which ranked 13 out of 16 in the Cabinet list, was a poisoned chalice, writing in his diary (28 October 1951) that it was "not my cup of tea at all ... I really haven't a clue how to set about the job". It meant obtaining scarce steel, cement and timber when the Treasury were trying to maximise exports and minimise imports.[94] 'It is a gamble—it will make or mar your political career,' Churchill said, 'but every humble home will bless your name if you succeed.'[95]

By July 1952 Macmillan was already criticising Butler (then Chancellor of the Exchequer) in his diary, accusing him of "dislik(ing) and fear(ing) him"; in fact there is no evidence that Butler regarded Macmillan as a rival at this stage. In April 1953 Beaverbrook encouraged Macmillan to think that in a future leadership contest he might emerge in a dead heat between Eden and Butler, as the young Beaverbrook (Max Aitken as he had been at the time) had helped Bonar Law to do in 1911.[96] In July 1953 Macmillan considered postponing his gall bladder operation in case Churchill, who had just suffered a serious stroke while Eden was also in hospital, had to step down.[97]

Macmillan achieved his housing target by the end of 1953, a year ahead of schedule.[98][99]

Minister of Defence (1954–1955) edit

 
Churchill's Cabinet, 1955 (Macmillan sitting on the far left)

Macmillan was Minister of Defence from October 1954, but found his authority restricted by Churchill's personal involvement.[100] In the opinion of The Economist: 'He gave the impression that his own undoubted capacity for imaginative running of his own show melted way when an august superior was breathing down his neck.'[101]

A major theme of his tenure at Defence was the ministry's growing reliance on the nuclear deterrent, in the view of some critics, to the detriment of conventional forces.[102] The Defence White Paper of February 1955, announcing the decision to produce the hydrogen bomb, received cross-party support.[103]

"It breaks my heart to see the lion-hearted Churchill begin to sink into a sort of Petain", Macmillan wrote in his diary as the Prime Minister's mental and physical powers visibly decayed. Macmillan was one of the few ministers brave enough to tell Churchill to his face that it was time for him to retire.[104] Petain, a successful French general in the First World War, had become senile while heading the pro-German Vichy Regime.

During the Second World War Macmillan's toothy grin, baggy trousers and rimless glasses had given him, as his biographer puts it, "an air of an early Bolshevik leader".[105] By the 1950s he had had his teeth capped, grew his hair in a more shapely style, wore Savile Row suits and walked with the ramrod bearing of a former Guards officer, acquiring the distinguished appearance of his later career.[106] Campbell writes "there has been no more startling personal reinvention in British politics".[107] He very often wore either an Old Etonian or a Brigade of Guards tie.[108] Campbell also suggests that Harold Wilson's image change during Macmillan's premiership from "boring young statistician into lovable Yorkshire comic" was made in conscious imitation of Macmillan.[72]

Foreign Secretary (1955) edit

Macmillan was Foreign Secretary in April–December 1955 in the government of Anthony Eden, who had taken over as prime minister from the retiring Churchill. Returning from the Geneva Summit of that year he made headlines by declaring: 'There ain't gonna be no war.'[109] Of the role of Foreign Secretary Macmillan observed:

Nothing he can say can do very much good and almost anything he may say may do a great deal of harm. Anything he says that is not obvious is dangerous; whatever is not trite is risky. He is forever poised between the cliché and the indiscretion.[109]

Chancellor of the Exchequer (1955–1957) edit

Budget edit

Macmillan was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer in December 1955.[110] He had enjoyed his eight months as Foreign Secretary and did not wish to move. He insisted on being "undisputed head of the home front" and that Eden's de facto deputy Rab Butler, whom he was replacing as Chancellor, not have the title "Deputy Prime Minister" and not be treated as senior to him. He even tried (in vain) to demand that Salisbury, not Butler, should preside over the Cabinet in Eden's absence. Macmillan later claimed in his memoirs that he had still expected Butler, his junior by eight years, to succeed Eden, but correspondence with Lord Woolton at the time makes clear that Macmillan was very much thinking of the succession. As early as January 1956 he told Eden's press secretary William D. Clark that it would be "interesting to see how long Anthony can stay in the saddle".[111]

Macmillan planned to reverse the 6d cut in income tax which Butler had made a year previously, but backed off after a "frank talk" with Butler, who threatened resignation, on 28 March 1956. He settled for spending cuts instead, and himself threatened resignation until he was allowed to cut bread and milk subsidies, something the Cabinet had not permitted Butler to do.[112]

One of his innovations at the Treasury was the introduction of premium bonds,[113] announced in his budget of 17 April 1956.[114] Although the Labour Opposition initially decried them as a 'squalid raffle', they proved an immediate hit with the public, with £1,000 won in the first prize draw in June 1957.

A young John Major attended the presentation of the budget, and attributes his political ambitions to this event.[115]

Suez edit

In November 1956, Britain invaded Egypt in collusion with France and Israel in the Suez Crisis. According to Labour Shadow Chancellor Harold Wilson, Macmillan was 'first in, first out':[116] first very supportive of the invasion, then a prime mover in Britain's humiliating withdrawal in the wake of the financial crisis caused by pressure from the US government.[117] Since the Egyptian Revolution of 1952, relations between Britain and Egypt had deteriorated. The Egyptian government, which came to be dominated by Gamal Abdel Nasser, was opposed to the British military presence in the Arab World. The Egyptian nationalisation of the Suez Canal by Nasser on 26 July 1956 prompted the British government and the French government of Guy Mollet to commence plans for invading Egypt, regaining the canal, and toppling Nasser. Macmillan wrote in his diary: "If Nasser 'gets away with it', we are done for. The whole Arab world will despise us ... Nuri [es-Said, British-backed Prime Minister of Iraq] and our friends will fall. It may well be the end of British influence and strength forever. So, in the last resort, we must use force and defy opinion, here and overseas".[118]

Macmillan threatened to resign if force was not used against Nasser.[119] He was heavily involved in the secret planning of the invasion with France and Israel. It was he who first suggested collusion with Israel.[120] On 5 August 1956 Macmillan met Churchill at Chartwell, and told him that the government's plan for simply regaining control of the canal was not enough and suggested involving Israel, recording in his diary for that day: "Surely, if we landed we must seek out the Egyptian forces; destroy them; and bring down Nasser's government. Churchill seemed to agree with all this."[121] Macmillan knew President Eisenhower well, but misjudged his strong opposition to a military solution. Macmillan met Eisenhower privately on 25 September 1956 and convinced himself that the US would not oppose the invasion,[122] despite the misgivings of the British Ambassador, Sir Roger Makins, who was also present. Macmillan failed to heed a warning from Secretary of State John Foster Dulles that whatever the British government did should wait until after the US presidential election on 6 November, and failed to report Dulles' remarks to Eden.

The treasury was his portfolio, but he did not recognise the financial disaster that could result from US government actions. Sterling was draining out of the Bank of England at an alarming rate. The canal was blocked by the Egyptians, and most oil shipments were delayed as tankers had to go around Africa. The US government refused any financial help until Britain withdrew its forces from Egypt. When he did realise this, he changed his mind and called for withdrawal on US terms, while exaggerating the financial crisis.[123] On 6 November Macmillan informed the Cabinet that Britain had lost $370m in the first few days of November alone.[124] Faced with Macmillan's prediction of doom, the cabinet had no choice but to accept these terms and withdraw. The Canal remained in Egyptian hands, and Nasser's government continued its support of Arab and African national resistance movements opposed to the British and French presence in the region and on the continent.[123]

In later life Macmillan was open about his failure to read Eisenhower's thoughts correctly and much regretted the damage done to Anglo-American relations, but always maintained that the Anglo-French military response to the nationalisation of the Canal had been for the best.[125] D. R. Thorpe rejects the charge that Macmillan deliberately played false over Suez (i.e. encouraged Eden to attack in order to destroy him as Prime Minister), noting that Macmillan privately put the chances of success at 51–49.[126]

Succession to Eden edit

Britain's humiliation at the hands of the US caused deep anger among Conservative MPs. After the ceasefire a motion on the Order Paper attacking the US for "gravely endangering the Atlantic Alliance" attracted the signatures of over a hundred MPs.[127] Macmillan tried, but failed, to see Eisenhower (who was also refusing to see Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd) behind Butler's and Eden's back. Macmillan had a number of meetings with US Ambassador Winthrop Aldrich, in which he said that if he were Prime Minister the US Administration would find him much more amenable. Eisenhower encouraged Aldrich to have further meetings. Macmillan and Butler met Aldrich on 21 November. Eisenhower spoke highly of Macmillan ("A straight, fine man, and so far as he is concerned, the outstanding one of the British he served with during the war").[128][129]

On the evening of 22 November 1956 Butler, who had just announced British withdrawal, addressed the 1922 committee (Conservative backbenchers) with Macmillan. After Butler's downbeat remarks, ten minutes or so in length, Macmillan delivered a stirring thirty-five minute speech described by Enoch Powell as "one of the most horrible things that I remember in politics ... (Macmillan) with all the skill of the old actor manager succeeded in false-footing Rab. The sheer devilry of it verged upon the disgusting." He expounded on his metaphor that henceforth the British must aim to be "Greeks in the Roman Empire", and according to Philip Goodhart's recollection almost knocked Butler off his chair with his expansive arm gestures. Macmillan wrote "I held the Tory Party for the weekend, it was all I intended to do". Macmillan had further meetings with Aldrich and Winston Churchill after Eden left for Jamaica (23 November) while briefing journalists (disingenuously) that he planned to retire and go to the Lords.[130][131] He was also hinting that he would not serve under Butler.[132]

Butler later recorded that during his period as acting Head of Government at Number Ten, he noticed constant comings and goings of ministers to Macmillan's study in Number 11 next door—and that those who attended all seemed to receive promotions when Macmillan became Prime Minister. Macmillan had opposed Eden's trip to Jamaica and told Butler (15 December, the day after Eden's return) that younger members of the Cabinet wanted Eden out.[133] Macmillan argued at Cabinet on 4 January that Suez should be regarded as a "strategic retreat" like Mons or Dunkirk. This did not meet with Eden's approval at Cabinet on 7 January.[134]

His political standing destroyed, Eden resigned on grounds of ill health on 9 January 1957.[135] At that time the Conservative Party had no formal mechanism for selecting a new leader, and the Queen appointed Macmillan Prime Minister after taking advice from Churchill and the Marquess of Salisbury, who had asked the Cabinet individually for their opinions, all but two or three opting for Macmillan. This surprised some observers who had expected that Eden's deputy Rab Butler would be chosen.[136] The political situation after Suez was so desperate that on taking office on 10 January he told the Queen he could not guarantee his government would last "six weeks"—though ultimately he would be in charge of the government for more than six years.[137]

Prime Minister (1957–1963) edit

 
Premiership of Harold Macmillan
10 January 1957 – 18 October 1963
MonarchElizabeth II
Harold Macmillan
CabinetMacmillan ministry
PartyConservative
Election1959
Seat10 Downing Street

First government, 1957–1959 edit

From the start of his premiership, Macmillan set out to portray an image of calm and style, in contrast to his excitable predecessor. He silenced the klaxon on the Prime Ministerial car, which Eden had used frequently. He advertised his love of reading Anthony Trollope and Jane Austen, and on the door of the Private Secretaries' room at Number Ten he hung a quote from The Gondoliers: "Quiet, calm deliberation disentangles every knot".[138]

Macmillan filled government posts with 35 Old Etonians, seven of them in Cabinet.[139] He was also devoted to family members: when Andrew Cavendish, 11th Duke of Devonshire was later appointed (Minister for Colonial Affairs from 1963 to 1964 among other positions) he described his uncle's behaviour as "the greatest act of nepotism ever".[140] Macmillan's Defence Minister, Duncan Sandys, wrote at the time: "Eden had no gift for leadership; under Macmillan as PM everything is better, Cabinet meetings are quite transformed".[141] Many ministers found Macmillan to be more decisive and brisk than either Churchill or Eden had been.[141] Another of Macmillan's ministers, Charles Hill, stated that Macmillan dominated Cabinet meetings "by sheer superiority of mind and of judgement".[142] Macmillan frequently made allusions to history, literature and the classics at cabinet meetings, giving him a reputation as being both learned and entertaining, though many ministers found his manner too authoritarian.[142] Macmillan had no "inner cabinet", and instead maintained one-on-one relationships with a few senior ministers such as Rab Butler who usually served as acting prime minister when Macmillan was on one of his frequent visits abroad.[142] Selwyn Lloyd described Macmillan as treating most of his ministers like "junior officers in a unit he commanded".[142] Lloyd recalled that Macmillan: "regarded the Cabinet as an instrument to play upon, a body to be molded to his will...very rarely did he fail to get his way"[142] Macmillan generally allowed his ministers much leeway in managing their portfolios, and only intervened if he felt something had gone wrong.[141] Macmillan was especially close to his three private secretaries, Tom Bligh, Freddie Bishop and Philip de Zulueta, who were his favourite advisers.[142] Many cabinet ministers often complained that Macmillan took the advice of his private secretaries more seriously than he did their own.[142]

He was nicknamed "Supermac" in 1958 by the cartoonist Victor Weisz, who intended to suggest that Macmillan was trying set himself up as a "Superman" figure.[142] It was intended as mockery but backfired, coming to be used in a neutral or friendly fashion. Weisz tried to label him with other names, including "Mac the Knife" at the time of widespread cabinet changes in 1962, but none caught on.[143]

Economy edit

Besides foreign affairs, the economy was Macmillan's other prime concern.[144] His One Nation approach to the economy was to seek high or full employment, especially with a general election looming. This contrasted with the Treasury ministers who argued that support of sterling required spending cuts and, probably, a rise in unemployment. Their advice was rejected and in January 1958 the three Treasury ministers—Peter Thorneycroft, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Nigel Birch, Economic Secretary to the Treasury, and Enoch Powell, the Financial Secretary to the Treasury and seen as their intellectual ringleader—resigned. D. R. Thorpe argues that this, coming after the resignations of Labour ministers Aneurin Bevan, John Freeman and Harold Wilson in April 1951 (who had wanted higher expenditure), and the cuts made by Butler and Macmillan as Chancellors in 1955–56, was another step in the development of "stop-go" economics, as opposed to prudent medium-term management.[145] Macmillan, away on a tour of the Commonwealth, brushed aside this incident as "a little local difficulty". He bore no grudge against Thorneycroft and brought him and Powell, of whom he was more wary, back into the government in 1960.[146]

This period also saw the first stirrings of more active monetary policy. Official bank rate, which had been kept low since the 1930s, was hiked in September 1958.[145] The change in bank rate prompted rumours in the City that some financiers – who were Bank of England directors with senior positions in private firms – took advantage of advance knowledge of the rate change in what resembled insider trading. Political pressure mounted on the Government, and Macmillan agreed to the 1957 Bank Rate Tribunal. Hearing evidence in the winter of 1957 and reporting in January 1958, this inquiry exonerated all involved in what some journalists perceived to be a whitewash.[147]

Domestic policies edit

During his time as prime minister, average living standards steadily rose[148] while numerous social reforms were carried out. The Clean Air Act 1956 was passed during his time as Chancellor; his premiership saw the passage of the Housing Act 1957, the Offices Act 1960, the Noise Abatement Act 1960,[149] and the Factories Act 1961; the introduction of a graduated pension scheme to provide an additional income to retirees,[150] the establishment of a Child's Special Allowance for the orphaned children of divorced parents,[151] and a reduction in the standard work week from 48 to 42 hours.[152][page needed]

Foreign policy edit

 
Macmillan with Indian Minister and head of Indian delegation Ashoke Kumar Sen and wife Anjana, daughter of Sudhi Ranjan Das
 
Macmillan meeting Eisenhower in Bermuda

Macmillan took close control of foreign policy. He worked to narrow the post-Suez Crisis (1956) rift with the United States, where his wartime friendship with Eisenhower was key; the two had a productive conference in Bermuda as early as March 1957.

In February 1959, Macmillan visited the Soviet Union. Talks with Nikita Khrushchev eased tensions in east–west relations over West Berlin and led to an agreement in principle to stop nuclear tests and to hold a further summit meeting of Allied and Soviet heads of government.[153]

In the Middle East, faced by the 1958 collapse of the Baghdad Pact and the spread of Soviet influence, Macmillan acted decisively to restore the confidence of Persian Gulf allies, using the Royal Air Force and special forces to defeat a revolt backed by Saudi Arabia and Egypt against the Sultan of Oman, Said bin Taimur, in July 1957;[154] deploying airborne battalions to defend Jordan against United Arab Republican subversion in July 1958;[155] and deterring Iraqi demands of Kuwait by landing a brigade group in June 1961 during the Iraq–Kuwait crisis of 1961 .[156]

Macmillan was a major proponent and architect of decolonisation. The Gold Coast was granted independence as Ghana, and the Federation of Malaya achieved independence within the Commonwealth of Nations in 1957. "The material strength of the Old Commonwealth members, if joined with the moral influence of the Asiatic members, meant that a united Commonwealth would always have a very powerful voice in world affairs," said Macmillan in a 1957 speech during a tour of the former British Empire.[157]

Nuclear weapons edit

 
First successful British H-bomb test—Operation Grapple X Round C1, which took place over Kiritimati

In April 1957, Macmillan reaffirmed his strong support for the British nuclear weapons programme. A succession of prime ministers since the Second World War had been determined to persuade the United States to revive wartime co-operation in the area of nuclear weapons research. Macmillan believed that one way to encourage such co-operation would be for the United Kingdom to speed up the development of its own hydrogen bomb, which was successfully tested on 8 November 1957.

Macmillan's decision led to increased demands on the Windscale and (subsequently) Calder Hall nuclear plants to produce plutonium for military purposes.[158] As a result, safety margins for radioactive materials inside the Windscale reactor were eroded. This contributed to the Windscale fire on the night of 10 October 1957, which broke out in the plutonium plant of Pile No. 1, and nuclear contaminants travelled up a chimney where the filters blocked some, but not all, of the contaminated material. The radioactive cloud spread to south-east England and fallout reached mainland Europe. Although scientists had warned of the dangers of such an accident for some time, the government blamed the workers who had put out the fire for 'an error of judgement', rather than the political pressure for fast-tracking the megaton bomb.[159][160]

Concerned that public confidence in the nuclear programme might be shaken and that technical information might be misused by opponents of defence co-operation in the US Congress, Macmillan withheld all but the summary of a report into the fire prepared for the Atomic Energy Authority by Sir William Penney, director of the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment.[161] Subsequently released files show that 'Macmillan's cuts were few and covered up few technical details',[162] and that even the full report found no danger to public health, but later official estimates acknowledged that the release of polonium-210 may have led directly to 25 to 50 deaths, and anti-nuclear groups linked it to 1,000 fatal cancers.[163][164]

On 25 March 1957, Macmillan acceded to Eisenhower's request to base 60 Thor IRBMs in England under joint control to replace the nuclear bombers of the Strategic Air Command, which had been stationed under joint control since 1948 and were approaching obsolescence. Partly as a consequence of this favour, in late October 1957 the US McMahon Act was eased to facilitate nuclear co-operation between the two governments, initially with a view to producing cleaner weapons and reducing the need for duplicate testing.[165] The Mutual Defence Agreement followed on 3 July 1958, speeding up British ballistic missile development,[166] notwithstanding unease expressed at the time about the impetus co-operation might give to atomic proliferation by arousing the jealousy of France and other allies.[167]

Macmillan saw an opportunity to increase British influence over the United States with the launching of the Soviet satellite Sputnik, which caused a severe crisis of confidence in the United States as Macmillan wrote in his diary: "The Russian success in launching the satellite has been something equivalent to Pearl Harbour. The American cockiness is shaken....President is under severe attack for the first time...The atmosphere is now such that almost anything might be decided, however revolutionary".[168] The "revolutionary" change that Macmillan sought was a more equal Anglo-American partnership as he used the Sputnik "crisis" to press Eisenhower to in turn press Congress to repeal the 1946 MacMahon Act, which forbade the United States to share nuclear technology with foreign governments, a goal accomplished by the end of 1957.[169]

In addition, Macmillan succeeded in having Eisenhower to agree to set up Anglo-American "working groups" to examine foreign policy problems and for what he called the "Declaration of Interdependence" (a title not used by the Americans who called it the "Declaration of Common Purpose"), which he believed marked the beginning of a new era of Anglo-American partnership.[170] Subsequently, Macmillan was to learn that neither Eisenhower nor Kennedy shared the assumption that he applied to the "Declaration of Interdependence" that the American president and the British Prime Minister had equal power over the decisions of war and peace.[171] Macmillan believed that the American policies towards the Soviet Union were too rigid and confrontational, and favoured a policy of détente with the aim of relaxing Cold War tensions.[172]

1959 general election edit

Macmillan led the Conservatives to victory in the 1959 general election, increasing his party's majority from 60 to 100 seats. The campaign was based on the economic improvements achieved as well as the low unemployment and improving standard of living; the slogan "Life's Better Under the Conservatives" was matched by Macmillan's own 1957 remark, "indeed let us be frank about it—most of our people have never had it so good,"[173] usually paraphrased as "You've never had it so good." Such rhetoric reflected a new reality of working-class affluence; it has been argued that "the key factor in the Conservative victory was that average real pay for industrial workers had risen since Churchill's 1951 victory by over 20 per cent".[174] The scale of the victory meant that not only had the Conservatives won three successive general elections, but they had also increased their majority each time. It sparked debate as to whether Labour (now led by Hugh Gaitskell) could win a general election again. The standard of living had risen enough that workers could participate in a consumer economy, shifting the working class concerns away from traditional Labour Party views.[175]

Second government, 1959–1963 edit

Economy edit

Britain's balance of payments problems led Chancellor Selwyn Lloyd to impose a seven-month wage freeze in 1961[176] and, amongst other factors, this caused the government to lose popularity and a series of by-elections in March 1962, of which the most famous was Orpington on 14 March.[177] Butler leaked to the Daily Mail on 11 July 1962 that a major reshuffle was imminent.[178] Macmillan feared for his own position and later (1 August) claimed to Lloyd that Butler, who sat for a rural East Anglian seat likely to suffer from EC agricultural protectionism, had been planning to split the party over EC entry (there is no evidence that this was so).[179]

In the 1962 cabinet reshuffle known as the 'Night of the Long Knives', Macmillan sacked eight Ministers, including Selwyn Lloyd. The Cabinet changes were widely seen as a sign of panic, and the young Liberal MP Jeremy Thorpe said of Macmillan's dismissals, "greater love hath no man than this, than to lay down his friends for his life". Macmillan was openly criticised by his predecessor Lord Avon, an almost unprecedented act.[180]

Macmillan supported the creation of the National Economic Development Council (NEDC, known as "Neddy"), which was announced in the summer of 1961 and first met in 1962. However, the National Incomes Commission (NIC, known as "Nicky"), set up in October 1962 to institute controls on income as part of his growth-without-inflation policy, proved less effective. This was largely due to employers and the Trades Union Congress (TUC) boycotting it.[176] A further series of subtle indicators and controls was introduced during his premiership.

The report The Reshaping of British Railways[181] (or Beeching I report) was published on 27 March 1963. The report starts by quoting the brief provided by the Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, from 1960, "First, the industry must be of a size and pattern suited to modern conditions and prospects. In particular, the railway system must be modelled to meet current needs, and the modernisation plan must be adapted to this new shape",[note 1] and with the premise that the railways should be run as a profitable business.[note 2] This led to the notorious Beeching Axe, destroying many miles of permanent way and severing towns from the railway network.

Foreign policy edit

 
Macmillan (left) on 1 August 1961 in Valkeakoski, Finland. In the middle, the Finnish Minister Ahti Karjalainen, and Sir Anthony Lambert standing to the right.

In the age of jet aircraft Macmillan travelled more than any previous Prime Minister, apart from Lloyd George who made many trips to conferences in 1919–22.[182] Macmillan planned an important role in setting up a four power summit in Paris to discuss the Berlin crisis that was supposed to open in May 1960, but which Khrushchev refused to attend owing to the U-2 incident.[183] Macmillan pressed Eisenhower to apologise to Khrushchev, which the president refused to do.[184] Macmillan's failure to make Eisenhower "say sorry" to Khrushchev forced him to reconsider his "Greeks and Romans" foreign policy as he privately conceded that could no "longer talk usefully to the Americans".[184] The failure of the Paris summit changed Macmillan's attitude towards the European Economic Community, which he started to see as a counterbalance to American power.[185] At the same time, the Anglo-American "working groups", which Macmillan attached such importance to turned out to be largely ineffective as the Americans did not wish to have their options limited by a British veto; by in-fighting between agencies of the U.S. government such as the State Department, Defense Department, etc.; and because of the Maclean-Burgess affair of 1951 the Americans believed the British government was full of Soviet spies and thus could not be trusted.[185]

Relations with the United States edit

The special relationship with the United States continued after the election of President John F. Kennedy, whose sister Kathleen Cavendish had married William Cavendish, Marquess of Hartington, the nephew of Macmillan's wife. Macmillan initially was concerned that the Irish-American Catholic Kennedy might be an Anglophobe, which led Macmillan, who knew of Kennedy's special interest in the Third World, to suggest that Britain and the United States spend more money on aid to the Third World.[186] The emphasis on aid to the Third World also coincided well with Macmillan's "one nation conservatism" as he wrote in a letter to Kennedy advocating reforms to capitalism to ensure full employment: "If we fail in this, Communism will triumph, not by war or even by subversion but by seemingly to be a better way of bringing people material comforts".[186]

Macmillan was scheduled to visit the United States in April 1961, but with the Pathet Lao winning a series of victories in the Laotian civil war, Macmillan was summoned on what he called the "Laos dash" for an emergency summit with Kennedy in Key West on 26 March 1961.[187] Macmillan was strongly opposed to the idea of sending British troops to fight in Laos, but was afraid of damaging relations with the United States if he did not, making him very apprehensive as he set out for Key West, especially as he had never met Kennedy before.[188] Macmillan was especially opposed to intervention in Laos as he had been warned by his Chiefs of Staff on 4 January 1961 that if Western troops entered Laos, then China would probably intervene in Laos as Mao Zedong had made it quite clear he would not accept Western forces in any nation that bordered China.[189] The same report stated that a war with China in Laos would "be a bottomless pit in which our limited military resources would rapidly disappear".[189] Kennedy for his part wanted Britain to commit forces to Laos if the United States did for political reasons. Kennedy wanted to avoid the charge that the United States would be acting unilaterally in Southeast Asia if it did intervene in Laos and because Britain was a member of SEATO and he would face domestic criticism if the United States was the only SEATO member to fight in Laos. For these reasons, Kennedy was adamant that if the United States intervened in Laos, then he expected the United Kingdom to likewise do so.[190] The meeting in Key West was very tense as Macmillan was heard to mutter "He's pushing me hard, but I won't give way".[188] However, Macmillan did reluctantly agree if the Americans intervened in Laos, then so too would Britain. The Laos crisis had a major crisis in Anglo-Thai relations as the Thais pressed for armed forces of all SEATO members to brought to "Charter Yellow", a state of heightened alert that the British representative to SEATO vetoed.[191] The Thais wanted to change the voting procedure for SEATO from requiring unanimous consent to a three-quarter majority, a measure that Britain vetoed, causing the Thais to lose interest in SEATO.[192]

The failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961 made Kennedy distrust the hawkish advice he received from the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the CIA, and he ultimately decided against intervention in Laos, much to Macmillan's private relief. Macmillan's second meeting with Kennedy in April 1961 was friendlier and his third meeting in London in June 1961 after Kennedy had been bested by Khrushchev at a summit in Vienna even more so. It was at his third meeting in London that Macmillan started to assume the mantle of an elder statesman, who offered Kennedy encouragement and his experience that formed a lasting friendship.[193] Believing that personal diplomacy was the best way to influence Kennedy, Macmillan appointed David Ormsby-Gore as his ambassador in Washington as he was a long-time friend of the Kennedy family, whom he had known since the 1930s when Kennedy's father had served as the American ambassador in London.[194]

He was supportive throughout the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 and Kennedy consulted him by telephone every day. The Ambassador David Ormsby-Gore was a close family friend of the President and actively involved in White House discussions on how to resolve the crisis.[195] About the Congo crisis, Macmillan clashed with Kennedy as he was against having United Nations forces put an end to the secessionist regime of Katanga backed by Belgium and the Western mining companies, which he claimed would destabilise the Central African Federation.[196] By contrast, Kennedy felt that the regime of Katanga was a Belgian puppet state and its mere existence was damaging to the prestige of the West in the Third World. Over Macmillan's objections, Kennedy decided to have the United Nations forces to evict the white mercenaries from Katanga and reintegrate Katanga into the Congo.[196] For his part, Kennedy pressed Macmillan unsuccessfully to have Britain join the American economic embargo against Cuba.[196] Macmillan told his Foreign Secretary, Lord Home "there is no reason for us to help the Americans with Cuba".[196]

Macmillan was a supporter of the nuclear test ban treaty of 1963, and in the first half of 1963 he had Ormsby-Gore quietly apply pressure on Kennedy to resume the talks in the spring of 1963 when negotiations became stalled. Feeling that the Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, was being obstructionist, Macmillan telephoned Kennedy on 11 April 1963 to suggest a joint letter to Khrushchev to break the impasse.[197] Through Khrushchev's reply to the Macmillan-Kennedy letter was mostly negative, Macmillan pressed Kennedy to take up the one positive aspect in his reply, namely that if a senior Anglo-American team would arrive in Moscow, he would welcome them to discuss how best to proceed about a nuclear test ban treaty.[197] The two envoys who arrived in Moscow were W. Averell Harriman representing the United States and Lord Hailsham representing the United Kingdom.[198] Through Lord Hailsham's role was largely that of an observer, the talks between Harriman and the Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko resulted in the breakthrough that led to the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of August 1963, banning all above ground nuclear tests.[198] Macmillan had a pressing domestic reasons for the nuclear test ban treaty. Newsreel footage of Soviet and American nuclear tests throughout the 1950s had terrified segments of the British public who were highly concerned about the possibility of weapons with such destructive power be used against British cities, and led to the foundation of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), whose rallies in the late 1950s-early 1960s calling for British nuclear disarmament were well attended. Macmillan believed in the value of nuclear weapons both as a deterrent against the Soviet Union and to maintain Britain's claim to be great power, but he was also worried about the popularity of the CND.[199] For Macmillan, banning above ground nuclear tests which generated film footage of the ominous mushroom clouds raising far above the earth was the best way to dent the appeal of the CND, and in this the Partial Nuclear Ban Treaty of 1963 was successful.[199]

Wind of Change edit

 
British decolonisation in Africa
 
Macmillan meets the Litunga of the Barotse in Northern Rhodesia, 1960

Macmillan's first government had seen the first phase of the sub-Saharan African independence movement, which accelerated under his second government.[200] The most problematic of the colonies was the Central African Federation, which had united Northern Rhodesia, Southern Rhodesia and Nyasaland together in 1953 largely out of the fear that the white population of Southern Rhodesia (modern Zimbabwe) might want to join South Africa, which had since 1948 had been led by Afrikaner nationalists distinctly unfriendly to Britain.[201] Through the Central African Federation had been presented as a multi-racial attempt to develop the region, the federation had been unstable right from the start with the black population charging that the whites had been given a privileged position.[201]

Macmillan felt that if the costs of holding onto a particular territory outweighed the benefits then it should be dispensed with. During the Kenyan Emergency, the British authorities tried to protect the Kikuyu population from the Mau Mau guerrillas (who called themselves the “Land and Freedom Army”) by interning the Kikuyu in camps. A scandal erupted when the guards at the Hola camp publicly beat 11 prisoners to death on 3 March 1959, which attracted much adverse publicity as the news filtered out from Kenya to the United Kingdom.[201] Many in the British media compared the living conditions in the Kenyan camps to the concentration camps of Nazi Germany, saying that the people in the camps were emaciated and sickly. The report of the Devlin Commission in July 1959 concerning the suppression of demonstrators in Nyasaland (modern-day Malawi) called Nyasaland "a police state".[201] In the aftermath of criticism about colonial policies in Kenya and Nyasland, Macmillan from 1959 onward started to see the African colonies as a liability, arguing at cabinet meetings that the level of force required to hang onto them would result in more domestic criticism, international opprobrium, costly wars, and would allow the Soviet Union to establish influence in the Third World by supporting self-styled "liberation" movements that would just make things worse.[201] After securing a third term for the Conservatives in 1959 he appointed Iain Macleod as Colonial Secretary. Macleod greatly accelerated decolonisation and by the time he was moved to Conservative Party chairman and Leader of the Commons in 1961 he had made the decision to give independence to Nigeria, Tanganyika, Kenya, Nyasaland (as Malawi) and Northern Rhodesia (as Zambia).[202] Macmillan embarked on his "Wind of Change" tour of Africa, starting in Ghana on 6 January 1960. He made the famous 'wind of change' speech in Cape Town on 3 February 1960.[203] It is considered a landmark in the process of decolonisation.

 
Macmillan meets Egypt 's President Gamal Abdel Nasser on the sidelines of United Nations General Assembly, 1960

Nigeria, the Southern Cameroons and British Somaliland were granted independence in 1960, Sierra Leone and Tanganyika in 1961, Trinidad and Tobago and Uganda in 1962, and Kenya in 1963. Zanzibar merged with Tanganyika to form Tanzania in 1963. All remained within the Commonwealth except British Somaliland, which merged with Italian Somaliland to form Somalia.

Macmillan's policy overrode the hostility of white minorities and the Conservative Monday Club. South Africa left the multiracial Commonwealth in 1961 and Macmillan acquiesced to the dissolution of the Central African Federation by the end of 1963.

In Southeast Asia, Malaya, Sabah (British North Borneo), Sarawak and Singapore became independent as Malaysia in 1963. Because Singapore with its ethnic Chinese majority was the largest and wealthiest city in the region, Macmillan was afraid that a federation of Malaya and Singapore together would result in a Chinese majority state, and insisted on including Sarawak and British North Borneo into the federation of Malaysia to ensure the new state was a Malay majority state.[204] During the Malaya Emergency, the majority of the Communist guerrillas were ethnic Chinese, and British policies tended to favour the Muslim Malays whose willingness to follow their sultans and imams made them more anti-communist. Southeast Asia was a region where racial-ethno-religious politics predominated, and the substantial Chinese minorities in the region were widely disliked on the account of their greater economic success.[205] Macmillan wanted Britain to retain military bases in the new state of Malaysia to ensure that Britain was a military power in Asia and thus he wanted the new state of Malaysia to have a pro-Western government.[204] This aim was best achieved by having the same Malay elite who had worked with the British colonial authorities serve as the new elite in Malaysia, hence Macmillan's desire to have a Malay majority who would vote for Malay politicians.[204] Macmillan especially wanted to keep the British base at Singapore, which he like other prime ministers saw as the linchpin of British power in Asia.[206]

The Indonesian president Sukarno strongly objected to the new federation, claiming on somewhat dubious grounds that all of Malaysia should be included in Indonesia.[207] On 8 December 1962, Indonesia sponsored a rebellion in the British protectorate of Brunei, leading to Macmillan to dispatch Gurkhas to put down the rebellion against the sultan.[208] In January 1963 Sukarno started a policy of konfrontasi ("confrontation") with Britain.[206] Macmillan detested Sukarno, partly because he had been a Japanese collaborator in World War Two, and partly because of his fondness for elaborate uniforms despite never having personally fought in a war offended the World War I veteran Macmillan, who had a strong contempt for any man who had not seen combat.[209] In his diary, Macmillan called Sukarno "a cross between Liberace and Little Lord Fauntleroy".[210] Macmillan felt that giving in to Sukarno's demands would be "appeasement" and clashed with Kennedy over the issue.[209] Sukarno was the leader of the most populous nation in Southeast Asia and though officially neutral in the Cold War, tended to take anti-Western positions, and Kennedy favoured accommodating him to bring him closer to the West; for example, supporting Indonesia's claim to Dutch New Guinea even through the Netherlands was a NATO ally.[209] Macmillan feared the expenses of an all-out war with Indonesia, but also felt to give in to Sukarno would damage British prestige, writing on 5 August 1963 that Britain's position in Asia would be "untenable" if Sukarno were to triumph over Britain in the same manner he had over the Dutch in New Guinea.[211] To help reduce the expenses of the war, Macmillan appealed to the Australian Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies to send troops to defend Malaysia. On 25 September 1963, Sukarno announced in a speech that Indonesia would "ganyang Mayaysia" ("gobble Malaysia raw") and on the same day a mob burned down the British embassy in Jakarta.[206] The result was the Indonesian Confrontation, an undeclared war between Britain vs. Indonesia that began in 1963 and continued to 1966.[212]

The speedy transfer of power maintained the goodwill of the new nations but critics contended it was premature. In justification Macmillan quoted Lord Macaulay in 1851:

Many politicians of our time are in the habit of laying it down as a self-evident proposition that no people ought to be free until they are fit to use their freedom. The maxim is worthy of the fool in the old story, who resolved not to go into the water until he had learnt to swim. If men are to wait for liberty until they become wise and good in slavery, they may indeed wait for ever.[213]

Skybolt crisis edit

 
Macmillan and John F. Kennedy confer in 1961

Macmillan cancelled the Blue Streak ballistic missile in April 1960 over concerns about its vulnerability to a pre-emptive attack, but continued with the development of the air-launched Blue Steel stand-off missile, which was about to enter trials. For the replacement for Blue Steel he opted for Britain to join the American Skybolt missile project. From the same year Macmillan permitted the US Navy to station Polaris submarines at Holy Loch, Scotland, as a replacement for Thor. When Skybolt was unilaterally cancelled by US Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, Macmillan negotiated with President Kennedy the purchase of Polaris missiles under the Nassau agreement in December 1962.[citation needed]

Europe edit

Macmillan worked with states outside the European Communities (EC) to form the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), which from 3 May 1960 established a free-trade area. As the EC proved to be an economic success, membership of the EC started to look more attractive compared to the EFTA.[214] A report from Sir Frank Lee of the Treasury in April 1960 predicated that the three major power blocs in the decades to come would be those headed by the United States, the Soviet Union and the EC, and argued to avoid isolation Britain would to have decisively associate itself with one of the power blocs.[214] Macmillan wrote in his diary about his decision to apply to join the EC: "Shall we be caught between a hostile (or at least less and less friendly) America and a boastful, powerful 'Empire of Charlemagne'-now under French, but later bound to come under German control?...It's a grim choice".[214]

Through Macmillan had decided upon joining the EC in 1960, he waited until July 1961 to formally make the application, for he feared the reaction of the Conservative Party backbenchers, the farmers' lobby and the populist newspaper chain owned by the right-wing Canadian millionaire Lord Beaverbrook, who saw Britain joining the EC as a betrayal of the British empire.[214] As expected, the Beaverbrook newspapers whose readers tended to vote Conservative offered up ferocious criticism of Macmillan's application to join the EC, accusing him of betrayal. Negotiations to join the EC were complicated by Macmillan's desire to allow Britain to continue its traditional policy of importing food from the Commonwealth nations of Australia, New Zealand and Canada, which led the EC nations, especially France, to accuse Britain of negotiating in bad faith.[214]

Macmillan also saw the value of rapprochement with the EC, to which his government sought belated entry, but Britain's application was vetoed by French president Charles de Gaulle on 29 January 1963. De Gaulle was always strongly opposed to British entry for many reasons. He sensed the British were inevitably closely linked to the Americans. He saw the European Communities as a continental arrangement primarily between France and Germany, and felt that if Britain joined, France's role would diminish.[215][216]

Partial Test Ban Treaty (1963) edit

Macmillan's previous attempt to create an agreement at the May 1960 summit in Paris had collapsed due to the 1960 U-2 incident. He was a force in the negotiations leading to the signing of the 1963 Partial Test Ban Treaty by the United Kingdom, the United States and the Soviet Union. He sent Lord Hailsham to negotiate the Test Ban Treaty, a sign that he was grooming him as a potential successor.[217]

President Kennedy visited Macmillan's country home, Birch Grove, on 29–30 June 1963, for talks about the planned Multilateral Force. They never met again, and this was to be Kennedy's last visit to the UK. He was assassinated in November, shortly after the end of Macmillan's premiership.[218]

End of premiership edit

By the early 1960s, many were starting to find Macmillan's courtly and urbane Edwardian manners anachronistic, and satirical journals such as Private Eye and the television show That Was the Week That Was mercilessly mocked him as a doddering, clueless leader.[219] Macmillan's handling of the Vassall affair – in which an Admiralty clerk, John Vassall, was convicted in October 1962 of passing secrets to the Soviet Union – undermined his "Super-Mac" reputation for competence.[219] D. R. Thorpe writes that from January 1963 "Macmillan's strategy lay in ruins", leaving him looking for a "graceful exit". The Vassall affair turned the press against him.[220] In the same month, opposition leader Hugh Gaitskell died suddenly at the age of 56. With a general election due before the end of the following year, Gaitskell's death threw the future of British politics into fresh doubt.[221] The following month Harold Wilson was elected as the new Labour leader, and he proved to be a popular choice with the public.[222]

Profumo affair edit

The Profumo affair of 1963 permanently damaged the credibility of Macmillan's government. The revelation of the affair between John Profumo (Secretary of State for War) and an alleged call-girl, Christine Keeler, who was simultaneously sleeping with the Soviet naval attache Captain Yevgeny Ivanov made it appear that Macmillan had lost control of his government and of events in general.[223] In the ensuing Parliamentary debate he was seen as a pathetic figure, while Nigel Birch declared, in the words of Browning on Wordsworth, that it would be "Never glad confident morning again!".[224] On 17 June 1963, he survived a Parliamentary vote with a majority of 69,[225] one fewer than had been thought necessary for his survival, and was afterwards joined in the smoking-room only by his son and son-in-law, not by any Cabinet minister. However, Butler and Reginald Maudling (who was very popular with backbench MPs at that time) declined to push for his resignation, especially after a tide of support from Conservative activists around the country. Many of the salacious revelations about the sex lives of "Establishment" figures during the Profumo affair damaged the image of "the Establishment" that Macmillan was seen as a part of, giving him the image by 1963 of a "failing representative of a decadent elite".[223]

Resignation edit

By the summer of 1963 Conservative Party Chairman Lord Poole was urging the ageing Macmillan to retire.[217] The full Denning report into the Profumo Scandal was published on 26 September 1963.[226]

Macmillan had a meeting with Butler on 11 September and was careful to keep his options open (retire now, retire in the New Year, or fight the next election). He talked the matter over with his son Maurice and other senior ministers. Over lunch with Lord Swinton on 30 September he favoured stepping down, but only if Baron Hailsham could be shoehorned in as his successor. He saw Butler on the morning of 7 October and told him he planned to stay on to lead the Conservatives into the next General Election, then was struck down by prostate problems on the night of 7–8 October, on the eve of the Conservative Party conference.[227][228]

Macmillan was operated on at 11.30 am on 10 October. Although it is sometimes stated that he believed himself to have inoperable prostate cancer, he in fact knew it was benign before the operation.[229] Macmillan was almost ready to leave hospital within ten days of the diagnosis and could easily have carried on, in the opinion of his doctor Sir John Richardson.[230] His illness gave him a way out.[231]

Succession edit

While recovering in hospital, Macmillan wrote a memorandum (dated 14 October) recommending the process by which "soundings" would be taken of party opinion to select his successor, which was accepted by the Cabinet on 15 October. This time backbench MPs and junior ministers were to be asked their opinion, rather than just the Cabinet as in 1957, and efforts would be made to sample opinion amongst peers and constituency activists.[231]

Enoch Powell claimed that it was wrong of Macmillan to seek to monopolise the advice given to the Queen in this way. In fact, this was done at the Palace's request, so that the Queen was not being seen to be involved in politics as had happened in January 1957, and had been decided as far back as June when it had looked as though the government might fall over the Profumo scandal. Ben Pimlott later described this as the "biggest political misjudgement of her reign".[232][233]

Macmillan was succeeded by Foreign Secretary Alec Douglas-Home in a controversial move; it was alleged that Macmillan had pulled strings and utilised the party's grandees, nicknamed 'The Magic Circle', who had slanted their "soundings" of opinion among MPs and Cabinet Ministers to ensure that Butler was (once again) not chosen.[234]

He finally resigned, receiving the Queen from his hospital bed, on 18 October 1963, after nearly seven years as prime minister. He felt privately that he was being hounded from office by a backbench minority:

Some few will be content with the success they have had in the assassination of their leader and will not care very much who the successor is. ... They are a band that in the end does not amount to more than 15 or 20 at the most.[235]

Retirement, 1963–1986 edit

 
Macmillan with Queen Elizabeth II in 1985

Macmillan initially refused a peerage and retired from politics in September 1964, a month before the 1964 election, which the Conservatives narrowly lost to Labour, now led by Harold Wilson.[236] His service in the House of Commons totalled 37 years.

Oxford chancellor (1960–1986) edit

Macmillan had been elected Chancellor of the University of Oxford in 1960, in a campaign masterminded by Hugh Trevor-Roper, and held this office for the rest of his life, frequently presiding over college events, making speeches and tirelessly raising funds. According to Sir Patrick Neill QC, the vice-chancellor, Macmillan "would talk late into the night with eager groups of students who were often startled by the radical views he put forward, well into his last decade."[237]

Return to Macmillan Publishers edit

In retirement Macmillan took up the chairmanship of his family's publishing house, Macmillan Publishers, from 1964 to 1974. The publishing firm remained in family hands until a majority share was purchased in 1995 by the Holtzbrinck Publishing Group; the imprint persists. Macmillan brought out a six-volume autobiography:

  1. Winds of Change, 1914–1939 (1966) ISBN 0-333-06639-1
  2. The Blast of War, 1939–1945 (1967) ISBN 0-333-00358-6
  3. Tides of Fortune, 1945–1955 (1969) ISBN 0-333-04077-5
  4. Riding the Storm, 1956–1959 (1971) ISBN 0-333-10310-6
  5. Pointing the Way, 1959–1961 (1972) ISBN 0-333-12411-1
  6. At the End of the Day, 1961–1963 (1973) ISBN 0-333-12413-8

Macmillan's biographer acknowledges that his memoirs were considered "heavy going".[238] Reading these volumes was said by Macmillan's political enemy Enoch Powell to induce 'a sensation akin to that of chewing on cardboard'.[239] Butler wrote in his review of Riding the Storm: "Altogether this massive work will keep anybody busy for several weeks."[240]

Macmillan's wartime diaries were better received.

  • War Diaries: Politics and War in the Mediterranean, January 1943 – May 1945 (London: St. Martin's Press, 1984) ISBN 0-312-85566-4

Since Macmillan's death, his diaries for the 1950s and 1960s have also been published, both edited by Peter Catterall:

  • The Macmillan Diaries: The Cabinet Years 1950–57 (London: Macmillan, 2003) ISBN 0-333-71167-X
  • The Macmillan Diaries Vol II: Prime Minister and After: 1957–1966 (London: Macmillan, 2011) ISBN 1-405-04721-6

Macmillan burned his diary for the climax of the Suez Affair, supposedly at Eden's request, although in Campbell's view more likely to protect his own reputation.[241]

London clubs edit

Macmillan was a member of many clubs. On his first evening as Prime Minister he made a public show of taking the Chief Whip Edward Heath for oysters at the Turf Club.[138]

He became President of the Carlton Club in 1977 and would often stay at the club when he had to stay in London overnight. Within a few months of becoming President he merged the Carlton and Junior Carlton. He was also a member of Buck's, Pratt's, the Turf Club and Beefsteak Club. He also once commented that White's was 75% gentlemen and 25% crooks, the perfect combination for a club.[242]

Political interventions edit

Macmillan made occasional political interventions in retirement. Responding to a remark made by Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson about not having boots in which to go to school, Macmillan retorted: 'If Mr Wilson did not have boots to go to school that is because he was too big for them.'[243]

Macmillan accepted the Order of Merit in 1976.[244] In October of that year he called for 'a Government of National Unity' including all parties, which could command the public support to resolve the economic crisis. Asked who could lead such a coalition, he replied: "Mr Gladstone formed his last Government when he was eighty-three. I'm only eighty-two. You mustn't put temptation in my way."[245] He discussed the idea with Eden, but the IMF loan saved the country and the Labour government.[245]

Macmillan still travelled widely, visiting China in October 1979, where he held talks with senior Vice-Premier Deng Xiaoping.[246]

Relations with Margaret Thatcher edit

 
Macmillan became critical of Margaret Thatcher (pictured in 1975)

Macmillan found himself drawn more actively into politics after Margaret Thatcher became Conservative leader in February 1975.[247] After she ended Labour's five-year rule and became Prime Minister in May 1979,[248] he told Nigel Fisher (his biographer, and himself a Conservative MP): "Ted [Heath] was a very good No2 {pause} not a leader {pause}. Now, you have a real leader. {long pause} Whether she's leading you in the right direction ..."[249]

The record of Macmillan's own premiership came under attack from the monetarists in the party, whose theories Thatcher supported.[250]: 27  In a celebrated speech he wondered aloud where such theories had come from:

Was it America? Or was it Tibet? It is quite true, many of Your Lordships will remember it operating in the nursery. How do you treat a cold? One nanny said, 'Feed a cold'; she was a neo-Keynesian. The other said, 'Starve a cold'; she was a monetarist.[251]

Macmillan was one of several people who advised Thatcher to set up a small War Cabinet to manage the Falklands War.[252] On his advice she excluded the Treasury from this body.[250]: 148  Having first inquired whether Argentina was known to have atomic weapons, Macmillan's advice was to appoint a senior military advisor, as Pug Ismay had been in the Second World War (in the event Admiral Lewin, Chief of Defence Staff, performed this role). She had already received advice to exclude the Treasury from Frank Cooper (the Permanent Under-Secretary for Defence), not least because of Macmillan's own behaviour, as Chancellor, in demanding a halt to the Suez operation.[253] She later recalled: 'I never regretted following Harold Macmillan's advice. We were never tempted to compromise the security of our forces for financial reasons. Everything we did was governed by military necessity.'[254]: 188 

With hereditary peerages again being created under Thatcher, Macmillan requested the earldom that had been customarily bestowed to departing prime ministers, and on 24 February 1984 he was created Earl of Stockton and Viscount Macmillan of Ovenden.[255] He is the last Prime Minister to have been given an hereditary peerage. He took the title from his former parliamentary seat on the edge of the Durham coalfields, and in his maiden speech in the House of Lords he criticised Thatcher's handling of the coal miners' strike and her characterisation of striking miners as 'the enemy within'.[254]: 370  He received an unprecedented standing ovation for his oration, which included the words:

It breaks my heart to see—and I cannot interfere—what is happening in our country today. This terrible strike, by the best men in the world, who beat the Kaiser's and Hitler's armies and never gave in. It is pointless and we cannot afford that kind of thing. Then there is the growing division of comparative prosperity in the south and an ailing north and Midlands. We used to have battles and rows but they were quarrels. Now there is a new kind of wicked hatred that has been brought in by different types of people.[251]

As Chancellor of Oxford University, Macmillan condemned its refusal in February 1985 to award Thatcher an honorary degree. He noted that the decision represented a break with tradition, and predicted that the snub would rebound on the university.[256]

Macmillan is widely supposed to have likened Thatcher's policy of privatisation to 'selling the family silver'. His precise quote, at a dinner of the Tory Reform Group at the Royal Overseas League on 8 November 1985, was on the subject of the sale of assets commonplace among individuals or states when they encountered financial difficulties: 'First of all the Georgian silver goes. And then all that nice furniture that used to be in the salon. Then the Canalettos go.' Profitable parts of the steel industry and the railways had been privatised, along with British Telecom: 'They were like two Rembrandts still left.'[257]

Macmillan's speech was much commented on, and a few days later he made a speech in the House of Lords, referring to it:

When I ventured the other day to criticise the system I was, I am afraid, misunderstood. As a Conservative, I am naturally in favour of returning into private ownership and private management all those means of production and distribution which are now controlled by state capitalism. I am sure they will be more efficient. What I ventured to question was the using of these huge sums as if they were income.[258]

Death and funeral edit

 
The Macmillan family graves in 2012 at St Giles' Church, Horsted Keynes. Macmillan's grave is on the right.

Macmillan had often play-acted being an old man long before real old age set in. As early as 1948 Humphry Berkeley wrote of how "he makes a show of being feeble and decrepit", mentioning how he had suddenly stopped shambling and sprinted for a train. Nigel Fisher tells an anecdote of how Macmillan initially greeted him to his house leaning on a stick, but later walked and climbed steps perfectly well, twice acting lame again and fetching his stick when he remembered his "act". However, in genuine old age he became almost blind, causing him to need sticks and a helping arm.[259]

On the evening of 29 December 1986, Macmillan died at Birch Grove, the Macmillan family mansion on the edge of Ashdown Forest, in Horsted Keynes, West Sussex.[260][261] His grandson and heir Alexander, Viscount Macmillan of Ovenden, said: "In the last 48 hours he was very weak but entirely reasonable and intelligent. His last words were, 'I think I will go to sleep now'."[262][263] His lifespan of 92 years and 322 days was the longest of any British prime minister until surpassed by Lord Callaghan on 14 February 2005.[264]

Paying tribute, Thatcher hailed Macmillan as "a very remarkable man and a very great patriot", and said that his dislike of "selling the family silver" had never come between them. He was "unique in the affection of the British people".[265] Additional tributes came from around the world. US President Ronald Reagan said: "The American people share in the loss of a voice of wisdom and humanity who, with eloquence and gentle wit, brought to the problems of today the experience of a long life of public service."[237] Outlawed African National Congress president Oliver Tambo sent his condolences: 'As South Africans we shall always remember him for his efforts to encourage the apartheid regime to bow to the winds of change that continue to blow in South Africa.'[237] Commonwealth Secretary-General Sir Shridath Ramphal affirmed: "His own leadership in providing from Britain a worthy response to African national consciousness shaped the post-war era and made the modern Commonwealth possible."[237]

 
Memorial tablet in St Giles' Church, Horsted Keynes

A private funeral was held on 5 January 1987 at St Giles' Church, Horsted Keynes, West Sussex, where he had regularly worshipped and read the lesson.[266] Two hundred mourners attended,[263] including 64 members of the Macmillan family, Thatcher and former premiers Lord Home and Edward Heath, as well as Lord Hailsham,[262] and "scores of country neighbours".[266] The Prince of Wales sent a wreath "in admiring memory".[262] He was buried beside his wife and next to his parents and his son Maurice, who had died in 1984.[266]

The House of Commons paid its tribute on 12 January 1987, with much reference made to his book The Middle Way.[267] Thatcher said: "In his retirement Harold Macmillan occupied a unique place in the nation's affections", while Labour leader Neil Kinnock struck a more critical note:

Death and distance cannot lend sufficient enchantment to alter the view that the period over which he presided in the 1950s, while certainly and thankfully a period of rising affluence and confidence, was also a time of opportunities missed, of changes avoided. Harold Macmillan was, of course, not solely or even pre-eminently responsible for that. But we cannot but record with frustration the fact that the vigorous and perceptive attacker of the status quo in the 1930s became its emblem for a time in the late 1950s before returning to be its critic in the 1980s.[267]

A public memorial service, attended by the Queen and thousands of mourners, was held on 10 February 1987 in Westminster Abbey.[268] Macmillan's estate was assessed for probate on 1 June 1987, with a value of £51,114 (equivalent to £152,955 in 2021[269]).[270]

Honours, awards and legacy edit

Macmillan was an elected Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 1962.[271]

In 1976 he received the Order of Merit. In 1984 he received the Freedom medal from the Roosevelt Study Center.

Macmillan's archives are located at Oxford University's Bodleian Library.[272][273]

Macmillan was awarded a number of honorary degrees, including:

Historians' assessments of Macmillan's premiership edit

C. P. Snow wrote to Macmillan that his reputation would endure as, like Churchill, he was "psychologically interesting".[278]

An early biographer George Hutchinson called him "The Last Edwardian at Number Ten" (1980), mistakenly in the view of Nigel Fisher.[279] Fisher described him as "complex, almost chameleon".[280] At times he portrayed himself as the descendant of a Scottish crofter, as a businessman, aristocrat, intellectual and soldier. Labour leader Harold Wilson wrote that his "role as a poseur was itself a pose".[281] Wilson also argued that behind the public nonchalance lay a real professional.[279] Fisher also wrote that he "had a talent for pursuing progressive policies but presenting them tactfully in a Conservative tone of voice".[282]

Historian John Vincent explores the image Macmillan crafted of himself for his colleagues and constituents:

He presented himself as a patrician, as the last Edwardian, as a Whig (in the tradition of his wife's family), as a romantic Tory, as intellectual, as a man shaped by the comradeship of the trenches and by the slump of the 1930s, as a shrewd man of business of bourgeois Scottish stock, and as a venerable elder statesman at home with modern youth. There was something in all these views, which he did little to discourage, and which commanded public respect into the early 1960s. Whether he was ever a mainstream Conservative, rather than a skilful exponent of the postwar consensus, is more doubtful.[283]

Alistair Horne, his official biographer, concedes that after his re-election in 1959 Macmillan's premiership suffered a series of major setbacks.[284]

Campbell writes that: "a late developer who languished on the back benches ... in the 1930s, Macmillan seized his opportunity when it came with flair and ruthlessness, and [until about 1962] filled the highest office with compelling style". However, he argues that Macmillan is remembered as having been "a rather seedy conjuror", famous for Premium Bonds, Beeching's cuts to the railways, and the Profumo Scandal. He is also remembered for "stop-go" economics: first expansion despite the opposition of Thorneycroft and his team, then Selwyn Lloyd's Pay Pause, and then finally the Maudling boom, with Britain's relative economic decline, especially compared to the countries of the EC, becoming clear despite perceptions of consumer "affluence" in the late 1950s. In the 1980s the aged Macmillan was seen as "a revered but slightly pathetic figure".[285]

Dominic Sandbrook writes that Macmillan's final weeks were typical of his premiership, "devious, theatrical and self-seeking" although not without droll wit and intelligence. Macmillan is best remembered for the "affluent society", which he inherited rather than created in the late 1950s, but chancellors came and went and by the early 1960s economic policy was "nothing short of a shambles", while his achievements in foreign policy made little difference to the lives of the public. By the time he left office, largely unlamented at the time, he was associated not with prosperity but with "anachronism and decay".[citation needed]

D. R. Thorpe writes that by the early 1960s Macmillan was seen as "the epitome of all that was wrong with anachronistic Britain. This was an unfair charge." "The essence of his persona was as elusive as mercury." He was not a member of "the Establishment"—in fact he was a businessman who had married into the aristocracy and a rebel Chancellor of Oxford. "He had style in abundance, (and) was a star on the world stage". Thorpe argues that despite his 1960 "Winds of Change" speech, he was largely pushed into rapid independence for African countries by Maudling and Macleod.[286]

Richard Lamb argues that Macmillan was "by far the best of Britain's postwar Prime Ministers, and his administration performed better than any of their successors". Lamb argues that it is unfair to blame Macmillan for excessively quick African independence (resulting in many former colonies becoming dictatorships), or for the Beeching Plan (which was accepted by Labour in 1964, although Macmillan himself had reservations and had asked civil servants to draw up plans for extra road-building), and argues that had he remained in power Macmillan would never have allowed inflation to get as far out of hand as it did in the 1970s.[5]


Cabinets (1957–1963) edit

January 1957 – October 1959 edit

Change

  • March 1957 – Lord Home succeeds Lord Salisbury as Lord President, remaining Commonwealth Relations Secretary.
  • September 1957 – Lord Hailsham succeeds Lord Home as Lord President, Home remaining Commonwealth Relations Secretary. Geoffrey Lloyd succeeds Hailsham as Minister of Education. The Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Reginald Maudling, enters the Cabinet.
  • January 1958 – Derick Heathcoat Amory succeeds Peter Thorneycroft as Chancellor of the Exchequer. John Hare succeeds Amory as Minister of Agriculture.

October 1959 – July 1960 edit

July 1960 – October 1961 edit

October 1961 – July 1962 edit

July 1962 – October 1963 edit

Note: In a radical reshuffle dubbed "The Night of the Long Knives", Macmillan sacked a third of his Cabinet.

Cultural depictions edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ RB(1963a), p. 1.
  2. ^ RB(1963a), p. 2. "It is, of course the responsibility of the British Railways Board so to shape and operate the railways as to make them pay."

References edit

  1. ^ "Harold Macmillan Dies at 92". The New York Times. 30 December 1986. from the original on 29 June 2021. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  2. ^ Middleton 1997, pp. 422–23.
  3. ^ Middleton 1997, p. 422.
  4. ^ Peter Hennessy, Having It So Good: Britain in the Fifties (London: Allen Lane, 2006), pp. 533–34.
  5. ^ a b Lamb 1995, pp. 14–15.
  6. ^ Leitch, David (8 December 1996), "The spy who rocked a world of privilege", The Independent, London, from the original on 4 August 2012
  7. ^ Fisher 1982, p. 2.
  8. ^ Horne 2008, p. 9.
  9. ^ Campbell 2010, p. 245.
  10. ^ "Winds of Change" speech, minute 29:04. "PM Harold Macmillan – Wind of Change Speech at the Cape Town Parliament – 3 February 1960". YouTube. from the original on 24 November 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  11. ^ Horne 2008, p. 13.
  12. ^ Williams 2010, p. 15.
  13. ^ "Mr T.S. Morton". The Times. 23 January 1962.
  14. ^ a b Horne 1988, p. 15.
  15. ^ Horne 2008, p. 16.
  16. ^ Simon Ball, The Guardsmen, Harold Macmillan, Three Friends and the World They Made, (London, Harper Collins), 2004, p. 19.
  17. ^ Williams 2010, pp. 19–26.
  18. ^ a b c d e Thorpe 2010.
  19. ^ Horne 1988, p. 22.
  20. ^ Thorpe 2010, p. 41
  21. ^ Supermac.
  22. ^ Thorpe 2011, pp. 47–48
  23. ^ "No. 28979". The London Gazette (Supplement). 17 November 1914. p. 9505.
  24. ^ "No. 29500". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 March 1916. p. 2533.
  25. ^ "No. 29376". The London Gazette (Supplement). 19 November 1915. p. 11582.
  26. ^ MacMillan 2010, p. 89
  27. ^ Lawton, John (1992), 1963: Five Hundred Days, Sevenoaks, UK: Hodder and Stoughton, ISBN 0-340-50846-9
  28. ^ Ball Guardsmen, p. 64.
  29. ^ Thorpe 2010, p. 58
  30. ^ "Harold Macmillan". from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2015. Spartacus Educational website biography.
  31. ^ Campbell 2010, p. 246–247.
  32. ^ Williams 2010, p. 31.
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Cited texts edit

  • Ashton, Nigel J (August 2005). "Harold Macmillan and the "Golden Days" of Anglo‐American Relations Revisited, 1957–63" (PDF). Diplomatic History. 29 (4): 691–723. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7709.2005.00511.x.
  • Beckett, Francis (2006). Macmillan. London: Haus Publishing. ISBN 978-1-904950-66-0.
  • Busch, Peter (2003). All the Way with JFK? Britain, the US, and the Vietnam War. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199256396.
  • Campbell, John (2010). Pistols at Dawn: Two Hundred Years of Political Rivalry from Pitt and Fox to Blair and Brown. London: Vintage. ISBN 978-1-845-95091-0. (contains an essay on Macmillan and Butler)
  • Dell, Edmund. The Chancellors: A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer, 1945–90 (HarperCollins, 1997) pp. 207–222, covers his term as Chancellor.
  • Fisher, Nigel (1982). Harold Macmillan. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-77914-8.
  • Goodlad, Graham; Pearce, Robert (2013). British Prime Ministers From Balfour to Brown. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415669832.
  • Horne, Alistair (1988). Macmillan Volume I: 1894–1956 (original ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-27691-4.
  • Horne, Alistair (1989). Macmillan Volume II: 1957–1986 (Original ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-49621-3.
  • Horne, Alistair (2008) [1988-9]. Macmillan: The Official Biography (Twentieth anniversary ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-71083-2.
  • Howard, Anthony (1987). RAB: The Life of R. A. Butler. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 978-0-224-01862-3.
  • Lamb, Richard (1995). The Macmillan Years 1957–63: The Emerging Truth. London: Murray. ISBN 978-0-719-55392-9.
  • Middleton, Roger (1997) [1996]. Government Versus the Market: Growth of the Public Sector, Economic Management and British Economic Performance, 1890–1979 (New ed.). Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85898-371-4.
  • Moore, Charles (2013). Margaret Thatcher: From Grantham to the Falklands.
  • Sandbrook, Dominic (2005). Never Had It So Good. London: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-349-11530-6.
  • Subritzy, John (1999). "Macmillan and East of Suez: the Case of Malaysia". In Lee, Richard (ed.). Macmillan: Aspects of a Political Life. London: Macmillan. pp. 177–194. ISBN 9780230376892.
  • Thorpe, D.R. (2010). Supermac: The Life of Harold Macmillan (Kindle ed.). London: Chatto & Windus. ISBN 978-1-844-13541-7.
  • Theatre Record (1997 for Hugh Whitemore's A Letter of Resignation; 2008 for Howard Brenton's Never So Good)
  • Williams, Charles (2010). Harold Macmillan. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-753-82702-4.
  • Wright, Oliver (1999). "Macmillan: A View from the Foreign Office". In Lee, Richard (ed.). Macmillan: Aspects of a Political Life. London: Macmillan. pp. 6–15. ISBN 9780230376892.

Further reading edit

  • Aldous, Richard, and Sabine Lee, eds. Harold Macmillan and Britain’s world role (Springer, 2016).
  • Ball, Simon. The Guardsmen: Harold Macmillan, Three Friends and the World They Made (Harper Perennial, London 2005). ISBN 978-0-00-653163-0
  • Betts, Lewis David. "Harold Macmillan and appeasement: implications for the future study of Macmillan as a foreign policy actor." Contemporary British History 32.2 (2018): 169–189.
  • Butler, Larry, and Sarah Stockwell, eds. The Wind of Change: Harold Macmillan and British Decolonization (Springer, 2013).
  • Davenport-Hines, Richard. An English Affair: Sex, Class and Power in the Age of Profumo HarperCollins, London 2013. ISBN 978-0-00-743585-2
  • Edmonds, Anthony O. and E. Bruce Geelhoed, Eisenhower, Macmillan and Allied Unity 1957–61, Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan,2003. ISBN 0-333-64227-9.
  • Evans, Brendan. "The oratory of Harold Macmillan", in Conservative Orators from Baldwin to Cameron (Manchester University Press, 2016).
  • Grant, Matthew. "Historians, the Penguin Specials and the 'State-of-the-Nation' Literature, 1958–64." Contemporary British History (2003) 17#3 pp29–54, focus on decline of Britain.
  • Hennessy, Peter. Having It So Good: Britain In The Fifties, Penguin Books, London 2006. ISBN 978-0-14-100409-9.
  • Hodge, Alan. "The Macmillan Years", History Today (December 1963), 13#12 pp. 848–851, covers 1931 to 1963.
  • Hughes, Emrys. Macmillan: Portrait of a Politician, Allen & Unwin, 1962. ISBN 978-0-04-923013-2
  • Hutchinson, George. The Last Edwardian at No.10: An Impression of Harold Macmillan, Quartet Books, London 1980. ISBN 978-0-7043-2232-5.
  • James, Elizabeth. Macmillan A Publishing Tradition, London, 2002. ISBN 0-333-73517-X
  • Merk, Dorothea, and Rüdiger Ahrens. "'Suspicious Federal Chancellor' Versus 'Weak Prime Minister': Konrad Adenauer and Harold Macmillan in the British and West German Quality Press during the Berlin Crisis (1958 to 1962). A Critical Discourse Analysis", in Europe in Discourse: Identity, Diversity, Borders (2016) pp. 101–116 online[dead link]
  • Ovendale, Ritchie. "Macmillan and the wind of change in Africa, 1957–1960", Historical Journal (1995) 38#2, pp. 455–477.
  • Rooke, Patrick J. The Wind of Change in Africa (1968) online
  • Sampson, Anthony. Macmillan: A Study in Ambiguity (A&C Black, 2012).
  • Sandford, Christopher. Harold and Jack: The Remarkable Friendship of Prime Minister Macmillan and President Kennedy (Prometheus Books, 2014)
  • Tolstoy, Nikolai. The Minister and the Massacres (London, 1986), ISBN 0-09-164010-5
  • Torreggiani, Valerio. "The Making of Harold Macmillan's Third Way in Interwar Britain (1924–1935)", in New Political Ideas in the Aftermath of the Great War (Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2017) pp. 67–85.
  • Turner, John (1994). Macmillan (Profiles In Power). London: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-55386-6.
  • Britannica Online about Harold Macmillan

Primary sources edit

  • Macmillan, Harold. The Macmillan Diaries: vol II, Prime Minister and after 1957–1966 (Pan, 2011).

External links edit

  • Annotated Bibliography for Harold Macmillan from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues 4 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Harold Macmillan
  • BBC Harold Macmillan obituary
  • President of the friends of Roquetaillade association [2]
  • 8 June 1958 speech on "Interdependence" at DePauw University
  • on the Downing Street website
  • 1968 – Britain's Harold Macmillan Makes Return Visit to DePauw, Calls for New Rapprochement 15 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • RootsAndLeaves.com, Cavendish family genealogy
  • Bodleian Library Suez Crisis Fiftieth Anniversary Exhibition
  • Portraits of Harold Macmillan, 1st Earl of Stockton at the National Portrait Gallery, London  
  • "Archival material relating to Harold Macmillan". UK National Archives.  
  • Newspaper clippings about Harold Macmillan in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Stockton-on-Tees
19241929
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Stockton-on-Tees
19311945
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Bromley
19451964
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Supply
1940–1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies
1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary of State for Air
1945
Succeeded by
Preceded byas Minister of Local Government and Planning Minister of Housing and Local Government
1951–1954
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Defence
1954–1955
Succeeded by
Preceded by Foreign Secretary
1955
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1955–1957
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
1957–1963
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the British Conservative Party
1957–1963
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
New title Minister Resident in Northwest Africa
1942–1945
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by Chancellor of the University of Oxford
1960–1986
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Earl of Stockton
Viscount Macmillan of Ovenden

1984–1986
Succeeded by

harold, macmillan, maurice, earl, stockton, february, 1894, december, 1986, british, statesman, conservative, politician, prime, minister, united, kingdom, from, 1957, 1963, nicknamed, supermac, known, pragmatism, unflappability, right, honourablethe, earl, st. Maurice Harold Macmillan 1st Earl of Stockton OM PC FRS 10 February 1894 29 December 1986 was a British statesman and Conservative politician who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1957 to 1963 1 Nicknamed Supermac he was known for his pragmatism wit and unflappability The Right HonourableThe Earl of StocktonOM PC FRSOfficial portrait 1959Prime Minister of the United KingdomIn office 10 January 1957 18 October 1963MonarchElizabeth IIFirst SecretaryRab Butler 1962 63 Preceded byAnthony EdenSucceeded byAlec Douglas HomeLeader of the Conservative PartyIn office 10 January 1957 18 October 1963Preceded byAnthony EdenSucceeded byAlec Douglas HomeMinisterial officesChancellor of the ExchequerIn office 20 December 1955 13 January 1957Prime MinisterAnthony EdenPreceded byRab ButlerSucceeded byPeter ThorneycroftSecretary of State for Foreign AffairsIn office 7 April 1955 20 December 1955Prime MinisterAnthony EdenPreceded byAnthony EdenSucceeded bySelwyn LloydMinister of DefenceIn office 19 October 1954 7 April 1955Prime MinisterWinston ChurchillPreceded byThe Earl Alexander of TunisSucceeded bySelwyn LloydMinister of Housing and Local GovernmentIn office 30 October 1951 19 October 1954Prime MinisterWinston ChurchillPreceded byHugh DaltonSucceeded byDuncan SandysSecretary of State for AirIn office 25 May 1945 26 July 1945Prime MinisterWinston ChurchillPreceded byArchibald SinclairSucceeded byThe Viscount StansgateMinister Resident in Northwest AfricaIn office 30 December 1942 25 May 1945Prime MinisterWinston ChurchillPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byHarold BalfourParliamentary Under Secretary of State for the ColoniesIn office 4 February 1942 30 December 1942Prime MinisterWinston ChurchillPreceded byGeorge HallSucceeded byThe Duke of DevonshireParliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of SupplyIn office 15 May 1940 4 February 1942Prime MinisterWinston ChurchillPreceded byJohn LlewellinSucceeded byThe Viscount Portal Parliamentary officesMember of the House of LordsLord TemporalHereditary peerage 24 February 1984 29 December 1986Succeeded byThe 2nd Earl of StocktonMember of Parliamentfor BromleyIn office 14 November 1945 25 September 1964Preceded byEdward CampbellSucceeded byJohn HuntMember of Parliamentfor Stockton on TeesIn office 27 October 1931 15 June 1945Preceded byFrederick Fox RileySucceeded byGeorge ChetwyndIn office 29 October 1924 10 May 1929Preceded byRobert Strother StewartSucceeded byFrederick Fox Riley Academic officesChancellor of the University of OxfordIn office 3 March 1960 18 December 1986Preceded byEdward WoodSucceeded byRoy JenkinsPersonal detailsBornMaurice Harold Macmillan 1894 02 10 10 February 1894London EnglandDied29 December 1986 1986 12 29 aged 92 Horsted Keynes West Sussex EnglandResting placeSt Giles Church Horsted Keynes West Sussex EnglandPolitical partyConservativeSpouseLady Dorothy Cavendish m 1920 died 1966 wbr Children4 including Maurice and CarolineAlma materBalliol College OxfordOccupationPublisherpoliticianCivilian awardsOrder of Merit 1976 Peerage 1984 SignatureMilitary serviceBranch serviceBritish ArmyYears of service1914 1920RankCaptainUnitGrenadier GuardsBattles warsFirst World War Battle of Loos Battle of the SommeMilitary awardsVictory MedalBritish War MedalMacmillan was badly injured as an infantry officer during the First World War He suffered pain and partial immobility for the rest of his life After the war he joined his family book publishing business then entered Parliament at the 1924 general election Losing his seat in 1929 he regained it in 1931 soon after which he spoke out against the high rate of unemployment in Stockton on Tees He opposed the appeasement of Germany practised by the Conservative government He rose to high office during the Second World War as a protege of Prime Minister Winston Churchill In the 1950s Macmillan served as Foreign Secretary and Chancellor of the Exchequer under Anthony Eden When Eden resigned in 1957 following the Suez Crisis Macmillan succeeded him as prime minister and Leader of the Conservative Party He was a One Nation Tory of the Disraelian tradition and supported the post war consensus He supported the welfare state and the necessity of a mixed economy with some nationalised industries and strong trade unions He championed a Keynesian strategy of deficit spending to maintain demand and pursuit of corporatist policies to develop the domestic market as the engine of growth Benefiting from favourable international conditions 2 he presided over an age of affluence marked by low unemployment and high if uneven growth In his speech of July 1957 he told the nation it had never had it so good 3 but warned of the dangers of inflation summing up the fragile prosperity of the 1950s 4 He led the Conservatives to success in 1959 with an increased majority In international affairs Macmillan worked to rebuild the Special Relationship with the United States from the wreckage of the 1956 Suez Crisis of which he had been one of the architects and facilitated the decolonisation of Africa Reconfiguring the nation s defences to meet the realities of the nuclear age he ended National Service strengthened the nuclear forces by acquiring Polaris and pioneered the Nuclear Test Ban with the United States and the Soviet Union After the Skybolt Crisis undermined the Anglo American strategic relationship he sought a more active role for Britain in Europe but his unwillingness to disclose United States nuclear secrets to France contributed to a French veto of the United Kingdom s entry into the European Economic Community 5 Near the end of his premiership his government was rocked by the Vassall and Profumo scandals which to cultural conservatives and supporters of opposing parties alike seemed to symbolise moral decay of the British establishment 6 Following his resignation Macmillan lived out a long retirement as an elder statesman being an active member of the House of Lords in his final years He died in December 1986 at the age of 92 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Family 1 2 Education and early political views 1 3 War service 1 4 Canadian aide de campship 1 5 Macmillan Publishers 2 Personal life 2 1 Marriage 3 Political career 1924 1951 3 1 Member of Parliament 1924 1929 3 2 Member of Parliament 1931 1939 3 3 Phoney War 1939 1940 3 4 Parliamentary Secretary Ministry of Supply 1940 1942 3 5 Colonial Under Secretary 1942 3 6 Minister Resident in the Mediterranean 1942 1945 3 7 Air Secretary 1945 3 8 Opposition 1945 1951 4 Political career 1951 1957 4 1 Housing Minister 1951 1954 4 2 Minister of Defence 1954 1955 4 3 Foreign Secretary 1955 4 4 Chancellor of the Exchequer 1955 1957 4 4 1 Budget 4 4 2 Suez 4 4 3 Succession to Eden 5 Prime Minister 1957 1963 5 1 First government 1957 1959 5 1 1 Economy 5 1 2 Domestic policies 5 1 3 Foreign policy 5 1 4 Nuclear weapons 5 1 5 1959 general election 5 2 Second government 1959 1963 5 2 1 Economy 5 2 2 Foreign policy 5 3 Relations with the United States 5 4 Wind of Change 5 4 1 Skybolt crisis 5 4 2 Europe 5 4 3 Partial Test Ban Treaty 1963 5 5 End of premiership 5 5 1 Profumo affair 5 5 2 Resignation 5 5 3 Succession 6 Retirement 1963 1986 6 1 Oxford chancellor 1960 1986 6 2 Return to Macmillan Publishers 6 3 London clubs 6 4 Political interventions 6 5 Relations with Margaret Thatcher 7 Death and funeral 8 Honours awards and legacy 8 1 Historians assessments of Macmillan s premiership 9 Cabinets 1957 1963 9 1 January 1957 October 1959 9 2 October 1959 July 1960 9 3 July 1960 October 1961 9 4 October 1961 July 1962 9 5 July 1962 October 1963 10 Cultural depictions 11 Notes 12 References 13 Cited texts 14 Further reading 14 1 Primary sources 15 External linksEarly life editFamily edit Macmillan was born on 10 February 1894 at 52 Cadogan Place in Chelsea London to Maurice Crawford Macmillan a publisher and the former Helen Nellie Artie Tarleton Belles an artist and socialite from Spencer Indiana 7 He had two brothers Daniel eight years his senior and Arthur four years his senior 8 His paternal grandfather Daniel MacMillan who founded Macmillan Publishers was the son of a Scottish crofter from the Isle of Arran 9 Macmillan considered himself a Scot 10 Education and early political views edit Macmillan received an intensive early education closely guided by his American mother He learned French at home every morning from a succession of nursery maids and exercised daily at Mr Macpherson s Gymnasium and Dancing Academy around the corner from the family home 11 From the age of six or seven he received introductory lessons in classical Latin and Greek at Mr Gladstone s day school close by in Sloane Square 12 13 Macmillan attended Summer Fields School Oxford 1903 06 He was Third Scholar at Eton College 14 but his time there 1906 10 was blighted by recurrent illness starting with a near fatal attack of pneumonia in his first half he missed his final year after being invalided out 15 16 and was taught at home by private tutors 1910 11 notably Ronald Knox who did much to instil his High Church Anglicanism 17 He won an exhibition scholarship to Balliol College Oxford 14 In his youth he was an admirer of the policies and leadership of a succession of Liberal prime ministers starting with Henry Campbell Bannerman who came to power when Macmillan was 11 years old and then H H Asquith whom he later described as having intellectual sincerity and moral nobility and particularly of Asquith s successor David Lloyd George whom he regarded as a man of action likely to accomplish his goals 18 page needed Macmillan went up to Balliol College in 1912 where he joined many political societies His political opinions at this stage were an eclectic mix of moderate conservatism moderate liberalism and Fabian socialism He read avidly about Disraeli but was also particularly impressed by a speech by Lloyd George at the Oxford Union Society in 1913 where he had become a member Macmillan was a protege of the president of the Union Society Walter Monckton later a Cabinet colleague as such he became secretary then junior treasurer elected unopposed in March 1914 then an unusual occurrence of the Union and would in his biographers view almost certainly have been president had the war not intervened 19 20 He obtained a First in Honour Moderations informally known as Mods consisting of Latin and Greek the first half of the four year Oxford Literae Humaniores course informally known as Classics in 1914 With his final exams over two years away he enjoyed an idyllic Trinity term at Oxford just before the outbreak of the First World War 21 War service edit Volunteering as soon as war was declared Macmillan was commissioned as a temporary second lieutenant in the King s Royal Rifle Corps on 19 November 1914 22 23 Promoted to lieutenant on 30 January 1915 24 he soon transferred to the Grenadier Guards 25 He fought on the front lines in France where the casualty rate was high including the probability of an early and violent death 18 page needed He served with distinction and was wounded on three occasions Shot in the right hand and receiving a glancing bullet wound to the head in the Battle of Loos in September 1915 Macmillan was sent to Lennox Gardens in Chelsea for hospital treatment then joined a reserve battalion at Chelsea Barracks from January to March 1916 until his hand had healed He then returned to the front lines in France Leading an advance platoon in the Battle of Flers Courcelette part of the Battle of the Somme in September 1916 he was severely wounded and lay for over twelve hours in a shell hole sometimes feigning death when Germans passed and reading Aeschylus in the original Greek 26 Raymond Asquith eldest son of the prime minister was a brother officer in Macmillan s regiment and was killed that month 27 Macmillan spent the final two years of the war in hospital undergoing a series of operations 28 He was still on crutches at the Armistice of 11 November 1918 29 His hip wound took four years to heal completely and he was left with a slight shuffle to his walk and a limp grip in his right hand from his previous wound which affected his handwriting 30 Macmillan saw himself as both a gownsman and a swordsman and would later display open contempt for other politicians e g Rab Butler Hugh Gaitskell Harold Wilson who often through no fault of their own had not seen military service in either World War 31 Canadian aide de campship edit Of the scholars and exhibitioners of his year only he and one other survived the war 32 As a result he refused to return to Oxford to complete his degree saying the university would never be the same 33 in later years he joked that he had been sent down by the Kaiser 34 Owing to the impending contraction of the Army after the war a regular commission in the Grenadiers was out of the question 35 However at the end of 1918 Macmillan joined the Guards Reserve Battalion at Chelsea Barracks for light duties 36 On one occasion he had to command reliable troops in a nearby park as a unit of Guardsmen was briefly refusing to reembark for France although the incident was resolved peacefully The incident prompted an inquiry from the War Office as to whether the Guards Reserve Battalion could be relied on 37 Macmillan then served in Ottawa Canada in 1919 as aide de camp ADC to Victor Cavendish 9th Duke of Devonshire then Governor General of Canada and his future father in law 38 The engagement of Captain Macmillan to the Duke s daughter Lady Dorothy was announced on 7 January 1920 39 He relinquished his commission on 1 April 1920 40 As was common for contemporary former officers he continued to be known as Captain Macmillan until the early 1930s and was listed as such in every general election between 1923 and 1931 41 As late as his North African posting of 1942 43 he reminded Churchill that he held the rank of captain in the Guards reserve 42 Macmillan Publishers edit On his return to London in 1920 he joined the family publishing firm Macmillan Publishers as a junior partner In 1936 Harold and his brother Daniel took control of the firm with the former focusing on the political and non fiction side of the business 18 page needed Harold resigned from the company on appointment to ministerial office in 1940 He resumed working with the firm from 1945 to 1951 when the party was in opposition Personal life editAccording to Michael Bloch there have long been rumours that Macmillan was expelled from Eton for homosexuality Macmillan s biographer D R Thorpe is of the view that he was removed by his mother when she discovered that he was being used by older boys 43 Dick Leonard reports that Alistair Horne refers to inevitable rumours and that he left for the usual reasons for boys to be expelled from public schools 44 Marriage edit Macmillan married Lady Dorothy Cavendish the daughter of the 9th Duke of Devonshire on 21 April 1920 Her great uncle was Spencer Cavendish 8th Duke of Devonshire who was leader of the Liberal Party in the 1870s and a close colleague of William Ewart Gladstone Joseph Chamberlain and Lord Salisbury Lady Dorothy was also descended from William Cavendish 4th Duke of Devonshire who served as Prime Minister from 1756 to 1757 in communion with Newcastle and Pitt the Elder Her nephew William Cavendish Marquess of Hartington married Kathleen Kennedy a sister of John F Kennedy In 1929 Lady Dorothy began a lifelong affair with the Conservative politician Robert Boothby an arrangement that scandalised high society but remained unknown to the general public 45 Philip Frere a partner in Frere Cholmely solicitors urged Macmillan not to divorce his wife which at that time would have been fatal to a public career even for the innocent party Macmillan and Lady Dorothy lived largely separate lives in private thereafter 46 The stress caused by that may have contributed to Macmillan s nervous breakdown in 1931 47 He was often treated with condescension by his aristocratic in laws and was observed to be a sad and isolated figure at Chatsworth in the 1930s 48 John Campbell suggests that Macmillan s humiliation was first a major cause of his odd and rebellious behaviour in the 1930s then in subsequent decades made him a harder and more ruthless politician than his rivals Eden and Butler 49 The Macmillans had four children Maurice Macmillan Viscount Macmillan of Ovenden 1921 1984 Lady Caroline Faber 1923 2016 Lady Catherine Amery 1926 1991 Sarah Heath 1930 1970 A family rumour that Boothby was her natural father has been discounted by the most recent and detailed study 18 page needed Lady Dorothy died on 21 May 1966 aged 65 In old age Macmillan was a close friend of Ava Anderson Viscountess Waverley nee Bodley the widow of John Anderson 1st Viscount Waverley 50 Eileen O Casey nee Reynolds the actress wife of Irish dramatist Sean O Casey was another female friend Macmillan publishing her husband s plays Although she is said to have replaced Lady Dorothy in Macmillan s affections there is disagreement over how intimate they became after the deaths of their respective spouses and whether he proposed 51 52 53 54 Political career 1924 1951 editMember of Parliament 1924 1929 edit Macmillan contested the depressed northern industrial constituency of Stockton on Tees in 1923 The campaign cost him about 200 300 out of his own pocket 55 at that time candidates were often expected to fund their own election campaigns The collapse in the Liberal vote let him win in 1924 56 In 1927 four MPs including Boothby and Macmillan published a short book advocating radical measures 56 In 1928 Macmillan was described by his political hero and now Parliamentary colleague David Lloyd George as a born rebel 18 page needed 57 Macmillan lost his seat in 1929 in the face of high regional unemployment He almost became Conservative candidate for the safe seat of Hitchin in 1931 58 However the sitting MP Guy Kindersley cancelled his retirement plans in part because of his own association with the anti Baldwin rebels and his suspicion of Macmillan s sympathy for Oswald Mosley s promises of radical measures to reduce unemployment Instead the resignation of the new candidate at Stockton allowed Macmillan to be re selected there and he returned to the House of Commons for his old seat in 1931 57 Member of Parliament 1931 1939 edit Macmillan spent the 1930s on the backbenches In March 1932 he published The State and Industry not to be confused with his earlier pamphlet Industry and the State 59 In September 1932 he made his first visit to the USSR 60 Macmillan also published The Next Step He advocated cheap money and state direction of investment In 1933 he was the sole author of Reconstruction A Plea for a National Unity In 1935 he was one of 15 MPs to write Planning for Employment His next publication The Next Five Years was overshadowed by Lloyd George s proposed New Deal in 1935 59 Macmillan Press also published the work of the economist John Maynard Keynes 56 Macmillan resigned the government whip but not the Conservative party one in protest at the lifting of sanctions on Italy after her conquest of Abyssinia 61 Chips Channon described him as the unprepossessing bookish eccentric member for Stockton on Tees and recorded 8 July 1936 that he had been sent a frigid note by Conservative Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin Baldwin later mentioned that he had survived by steering a middle course between Harold Macmillan and John Gretton an extreme right winger 62 The Next Five Years Group to which Macmillan had belonged was wound up in November 1937 His book The Middle Way appeared in June 1938 advocating a broadly centrist political philosophy both domestically and internationally Macmillan took control of the magazine New Outlook and made sure it published political tracts rather than purely theoretical work 59 In 1936 Macmillan proposed the creation of a cross party forum of antifascists to create democratic unity but his ideas were rejected by the leadership of both the Labour and Conservative parties 63 Macmillan supported Chamberlain s first flight for talks with Hitler at Berchtesgaden but not his subsequent flights to Bad Godesberg and Munich After Munich he was looking for a 1931 in reverse i e a Labour dominated coalition in which some Conservatives would serve the reverse of the Conservative dominated coalition which had governed Britain since 1931 64 He supported the independent candidate Lindsay at the 1938 Oxford by election He wrote a pamphlet The Price of Peace calling for alliance between Britain France and the USSR but expecting Poland to make territorial accommodation to Germany i e give up the Danzig corridor In Economic Aspects of Defence early in 1939 he called for a Ministry of Supply 65 Phoney War 1939 1940 edit Macmillan visited Finland in February 1940 then the subject of great sympathy in Britain as it was being invaded by the USSR then loosely allied to Nazi Germany His last speech from the backbenches was to attack the government for not doing enough to help Finland Britain was saved from a potentially embarrassing commitment when the Winter War ended in March 1940 66 Macmillan voted against the Government in the Norway Debate of May 1940 helping to bring down Neville Chamberlain as Prime Minister and tried to join in with Colonel Josiah Wedgwood singing Rule Britannia in the House of Commons Chamber 67 Parliamentary Secretary Ministry of Supply 1940 1942 edit Macmillan at last attained office by serving in the wartime coalition government as the Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Supply from 1940 Channon commented 29 May 1940 that there was some amusement over Harold Macmillan s so obvious enjoyment of his new position 68 Macmillan s job was to provide armaments and other equipment to the British Army and Royal Air Force He travelled up and down the country to co ordinate production working with some success under Lord Beaverbrook to increase the supply and quality of armoured vehicles 69 Colonial Under Secretary 1942 edit nbsp Macmillan in 1942Macmillan was appointed Under Secretary of State for the Colonies in 1942 in his own words leaving a madhouse to enter a mausoleum 70 Though a junior minister he was a member of the Privy Council and he spoke in the House of Commons for Colonial Secretaries Lord Moyne and Lord Cranborne Macmillan was given responsibility for increasing colonial production and trade and signalled the future policy direction when in June 1942 he declared The governing principle of the Colonial Empire should be the principle of partnership between the various elements composing it Out of partnership comes understanding and friendship Within the fabric of the Commonwealth lies the future of the Colonial territories 71 Macmillan predicted that the Conservatives faced landslide defeat after the war causing Channon to write 6 Sep 1944 of the foolish prophecy of that nice ass Harold Macmillan In October 1942 Harold Nicolson recorded Macmillan as predicting extreme socialism after the war 72 Macmillan nearly resigned when Oliver Stanley was appointed Secretary of State in November 1942 as he would no longer be the spokesman in the Commons as he had been under Cranborne Brendan Bracken advised him not to quit 73 Minister Resident in the Mediterranean 1942 1945 edit After Harry Crookshank had refused the job Macmillan attained real power and Cabinet rank late in 1942 as British Minister Resident at Algiers in the Mediterranean recently liberated in Operation Torch He reported directly to the Prime Minister instead of to the Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden Oliver Lyttelton had a similar job at Cairo while Robert Murphy was Macmillan s US counterpart 73 Macmillan built a rapport with US General Dwight D Eisenhower then Supreme Allied Commander in the Mediterranean SACMED which proved helpful in his career 74 and Richard Crossman later recalled that Macmillan s Greeks in the Roman Empire metaphor dated from this time i e that as the US replaced Britain as the world s leading power British politicians and diplomats should aim to guide her in the same way that Greek slaves and freedmen had advised powerful Romans 75 Macmillan told Crossman We my dear Crossman are the Greeks in the American empire You will find the Americans much as the Greeks found the Romans great big vulgar bustling people more vigorous than we are and also more idle with more unspoiled virtues but also more corrupt We must run AFHQ Allied Forces Headquarters as the Greek slaves ran the operations of the Emperor Claudius 76 At the Casablanca Conference Macmillan helped to secure US acceptance if not recognition of the Free French leader Charles de Gaulle 77 Macmillan wrote in his diary during the Casablanca conference I christened the two personalities the Emperor of the East and the Emperor of the West and indeed it was rather like a meeting of the late Roman empire 76 For Macmillan the remarkable and romantic episodes as President Roosevelt met Prime Minister Churchill in Casablanca convinced him that personal diplomacy was the best way to deal with Americans which later influenced his foreign policy as prime minister 78 On 22 February 1943 Macmillan was badly burned in a plane crash 79 trying to climb back into the plane to rescue a Frenchman He had to have a plaster cast put on his face In his delirium he imagined himself back in a Somme casualty clearing station and asked for a message to be passed to his mother now dead 80 nbsp Macmillan top row left with Allied military leaders in the Sicilian campaign 1943 Maj Gen Bedell Smith to his left Front Row General Eisenhower then Supreme Commander Mediterranean Air Chief Marshal Tedder General Alexander Admiral CunninghamTogether with Gladwyn Jebb he helped to negotiate the Italian armistice in August 1943 between the fall of Sicily and the Salerno Landings This caused friction with Eden and the Foreign Office 81 He was based at Caserta for the rest of the war He was appointed UK High Commissioner for the Advisory Council for Italy late in 1943 82 He visited London in October 1943 and again clashed with Eden Eden appointed Duff Cooper as Representative to the Free French government in Algeria after the liberation of mainland France he later continued as Ambassador to France from November 1944 and Noel Charles as Ambassador to Italy to reduce Macmillan s influence 83 In May 1944 Macmillan infuriated Eden by demanding an early peace treaty with Italy at that time a pro Allied regime under Badoglio held some power in the southern liberated part of Italy a move which Churchill favoured In June 1944 he argued for a British led thrust up the Ljubljana Gap into Central Europe Operation Armpit instead of the planned diversion of US and Free French forces to the South of France Operation Dragoon This proposal impressed Churchill and General Alexander but did not meet with American approval Eden sent out Robert Dixon to abolish the job of Resident Minister there being then no job for Macmillan back in the UK but he managed to prevent his job being abolished Churchill visited Italy in August 1944 On 14 September 1944 Macmillan was appointed Chief Commissioner of the Allied Control Commission for Italy in succession to General Noel Mason MacFarlane He continued to be British Minister Resident at Allied Headquarters and British political adviser to Jumbo Wilson now Supreme Commander Mediterranean On 10 November 1944 he was appointed Acting President of the Allied Commission the Supreme Commander being President 84 Macmillan visited Greece on 11 December 1944 As the Germans had withdrawn British troops under General Scobie had deployed to Athens but there were concerns that the pro communist Greek resistance EAM and its military wing ELAS would take power see Dekemvriana or come into conflict with British troops Macmillan rode in a tank and was under sniper fire at the British Embassy Despite the hostility of large sections of British and American opinion who were sympathetic to the guerrillas and hostile to what was seen as imperialist behaviour he persuaded a reluctant Churchill who visited Athens later in the month to accept Archbishop Damaskinos as Regent on behalf of the exiled King George II A truce was negotiated in January 1945 enabling a pro British regime to remain in power as Churchill had demanded in the Percentages agreement the previous autumn 85 In 1947 the US would take over Britain s role as protector of Greece and Turkey to keep the Soviets out of the Mediterranean the so called Truman Doctrine Macmillan was also the minister advising General Keightley of V Corps the senior Allied commander in Austria responsible for Operation Keelhaul which included the forced repatriation of up to 70 000 prisoners of war to the Soviet Union and Josip Broz Tito s Yugoslavia in 1945 The deportations and Macmillan s involvement later became a source of controversy because of the harsh treatment meted out to Nazi collaborators and anti partisans by the receiving countries and because in the confusion V Corps went beyond the terms agreed at Yalta and Allied Forces Headquarters directives by repatriating 4000 White Russian troops and 11 000 civilian family members 86 87 88 Air Secretary 1945 edit Macmillan toyed with an offer to succeed Duff Cooper as MP for the safe Conservative seat of Westminster St George s 58 Criticised locally for his long absence he suggested that Lady Dorothy stand for Stockton in 1945 as she had been nursing the seat for five years She was apparently willing However it was thought better for him to be seen to defend his seat and Lord Beaverbrook had already spoken to Churchill to arrange that Macmillan be given another seat in the event of defeat 89 Macmillan returned to England after the European war feeling himself almost a stranger at home 90 He was Secretary of State for Air for two months in Churchill s caretaker government much of which was taken up in electioneering there being nothing much to be done in the way of forward planning 91 Opposition 1945 1951 edit Macmillan indeed lost Stockton in the landslide Labour victory of July 1945 but returned to Parliament in the November 1945 by election in Bromley In his diary Harold Nicolson noted the feelings of the Tory backbenchers They feel that Winston is too old and Anthony Eden too weak They want Harold Macmillan to lead them 92 He was a member of the British delegation to the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe from 1949 to 1951 and played a prominent role as a key aide and ally of Winston Churchill in pressing for greater European integration as a bulwark against Soviet totalitarianism and to prevent a recurrence of the horrors of Nazi rule Although Macmillan played an important role in drafting the Industrial Charter Crossbencher in the Sunday Express called it the second edition of The Middle Way he now as MP for a safe seat adopted a somewhat more right wing public persona defending private enterprise and fiercely opposing the Labour government in the House of Commons 93 Political career 1951 1957 editHousing Minister 1951 1954 edit With the Conservative victory in 1951 Macmillan became Minister of Housing amp Local Government under Churchill who entrusted him with fulfilling the pledge to build 300 000 houses per year up from the previous target of 200 000 a year made in response to a speech from the floor at the 1950 Party Conference Macmillan thought at first that Housing which ranked 13 out of 16 in the Cabinet list was a poisoned chalice writing in his diary 28 October 1951 that it was not my cup of tea at all I really haven t a clue how to set about the job It meant obtaining scarce steel cement and timber when the Treasury were trying to maximise exports and minimise imports 94 It is a gamble it will make or mar your political career Churchill said but every humble home will bless your name if you succeed 95 By July 1952 Macmillan was already criticising Butler then Chancellor of the Exchequer in his diary accusing him of dislik ing and fear ing him in fact there is no evidence that Butler regarded Macmillan as a rival at this stage In April 1953 Beaverbrook encouraged Macmillan to think that in a future leadership contest he might emerge in a dead heat between Eden and Butler as the young Beaverbrook Max Aitken as he had been at the time had helped Bonar Law to do in 1911 96 In July 1953 Macmillan considered postponing his gall bladder operation in case Churchill who had just suffered a serious stroke while Eden was also in hospital had to step down 97 Macmillan achieved his housing target by the end of 1953 a year ahead of schedule 98 99 Minister of Defence 1954 1955 edit nbsp Churchill s Cabinet 1955 Macmillan sitting on the far left Macmillan was Minister of Defence from October 1954 but found his authority restricted by Churchill s personal involvement 100 In the opinion of The Economist He gave the impression that his own undoubted capacity for imaginative running of his own show melted way when an august superior was breathing down his neck 101 A major theme of his tenure at Defence was the ministry s growing reliance on the nuclear deterrent in the view of some critics to the detriment of conventional forces 102 The Defence White Paper of February 1955 announcing the decision to produce the hydrogen bomb received cross party support 103 It breaks my heart to see the lion hearted Churchill begin to sink into a sort of Petain Macmillan wrote in his diary as the Prime Minister s mental and physical powers visibly decayed Macmillan was one of the few ministers brave enough to tell Churchill to his face that it was time for him to retire 104 Petain a successful French general in the First World War had become senile while heading the pro German Vichy Regime During the Second World War Macmillan s toothy grin baggy trousers and rimless glasses had given him as his biographer puts it an air of an early Bolshevik leader 105 By the 1950s he had had his teeth capped grew his hair in a more shapely style wore Savile Row suits and walked with the ramrod bearing of a former Guards officer acquiring the distinguished appearance of his later career 106 Campbell writes there has been no more startling personal reinvention in British politics 107 He very often wore either an Old Etonian or a Brigade of Guards tie 108 Campbell also suggests that Harold Wilson s image change during Macmillan s premiership from boring young statistician into lovable Yorkshire comic was made in conscious imitation of Macmillan 72 Foreign Secretary 1955 edit Macmillan was Foreign Secretary in April December 1955 in the government of Anthony Eden who had taken over as prime minister from the retiring Churchill Returning from the Geneva Summit of that year he made headlines by declaring There ain t gonna be no war 109 Of the role of Foreign Secretary Macmillan observed Nothing he can say can do very much good and almost anything he may say may do a great deal of harm Anything he says that is not obvious is dangerous whatever is not trite is risky He is forever poised between the cliche and the indiscretion 109 Chancellor of the Exchequer 1955 1957 edit Budget edit Macmillan was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer in December 1955 110 He had enjoyed his eight months as Foreign Secretary and did not wish to move He insisted on being undisputed head of the home front and that Eden s de facto deputy Rab Butler whom he was replacing as Chancellor not have the title Deputy Prime Minister and not be treated as senior to him He even tried in vain to demand that Salisbury not Butler should preside over the Cabinet in Eden s absence Macmillan later claimed in his memoirs that he had still expected Butler his junior by eight years to succeed Eden but correspondence with Lord Woolton at the time makes clear that Macmillan was very much thinking of the succession As early as January 1956 he told Eden s press secretary William D Clark that it would be interesting to see how long Anthony can stay in the saddle 111 Macmillan planned to reverse the 6d cut in income tax which Butler had made a year previously but backed off after a frank talk with Butler who threatened resignation on 28 March 1956 He settled for spending cuts instead and himself threatened resignation until he was allowed to cut bread and milk subsidies something the Cabinet had not permitted Butler to do 112 One of his innovations at the Treasury was the introduction of premium bonds 113 announced in his budget of 17 April 1956 114 Although the Labour Opposition initially decried them as a squalid raffle they proved an immediate hit with the public with 1 000 won in the first prize draw in June 1957 A young John Major attended the presentation of the budget and attributes his political ambitions to this event 115 Suez edit In November 1956 Britain invaded Egypt in collusion with France and Israel in the Suez Crisis According to Labour Shadow Chancellor Harold Wilson Macmillan was first in first out 116 first very supportive of the invasion then a prime mover in Britain s humiliating withdrawal in the wake of the financial crisis caused by pressure from the US government 117 Since the Egyptian Revolution of 1952 relations between Britain and Egypt had deteriorated The Egyptian government which came to be dominated by Gamal Abdel Nasser was opposed to the British military presence in the Arab World The Egyptian nationalisation of the Suez Canal by Nasser on 26 July 1956 prompted the British government and the French government of Guy Mollet to commence plans for invading Egypt regaining the canal and toppling Nasser Macmillan wrote in his diary If Nasser gets away with it we are done for The whole Arab world will despise us Nuri es Said British backed Prime Minister of Iraq and our friends will fall It may well be the end of British influence and strength forever So in the last resort we must use force and defy opinion here and overseas 118 Macmillan threatened to resign if force was not used against Nasser 119 He was heavily involved in the secret planning of the invasion with France and Israel It was he who first suggested collusion with Israel 120 On 5 August 1956 Macmillan met Churchill at Chartwell and told him that the government s plan for simply regaining control of the canal was not enough and suggested involving Israel recording in his diary for that day Surely if we landed we must seek out the Egyptian forces destroy them and bring down Nasser s government Churchill seemed to agree with all this 121 Macmillan knew President Eisenhower well but misjudged his strong opposition to a military solution Macmillan met Eisenhower privately on 25 September 1956 and convinced himself that the US would not oppose the invasion 122 despite the misgivings of the British Ambassador Sir Roger Makins who was also present Macmillan failed to heed a warning from Secretary of State John Foster Dulles that whatever the British government did should wait until after the US presidential election on 6 November and failed to report Dulles remarks to Eden The treasury was his portfolio but he did not recognise the financial disaster that could result from US government actions Sterling was draining out of the Bank of England at an alarming rate The canal was blocked by the Egyptians and most oil shipments were delayed as tankers had to go around Africa The US government refused any financial help until Britain withdrew its forces from Egypt When he did realise this he changed his mind and called for withdrawal on US terms while exaggerating the financial crisis 123 On 6 November Macmillan informed the Cabinet that Britain had lost 370m in the first few days of November alone 124 Faced with Macmillan s prediction of doom the cabinet had no choice but to accept these terms and withdraw The Canal remained in Egyptian hands and Nasser s government continued its support of Arab and African national resistance movements opposed to the British and French presence in the region and on the continent 123 In later life Macmillan was open about his failure to read Eisenhower s thoughts correctly and much regretted the damage done to Anglo American relations but always maintained that the Anglo French military response to the nationalisation of the Canal had been for the best 125 D R Thorpe rejects the charge that Macmillan deliberately played false over Suez i e encouraged Eden to attack in order to destroy him as Prime Minister noting that Macmillan privately put the chances of success at 51 49 126 Succession to Eden edit Britain s humiliation at the hands of the US caused deep anger among Conservative MPs After the ceasefire a motion on the Order Paper attacking the US for gravely endangering the Atlantic Alliance attracted the signatures of over a hundred MPs 127 Macmillan tried but failed to see Eisenhower who was also refusing to see Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd behind Butler s and Eden s back Macmillan had a number of meetings with US Ambassador Winthrop Aldrich in which he said that if he were Prime Minister the US Administration would find him much more amenable Eisenhower encouraged Aldrich to have further meetings Macmillan and Butler met Aldrich on 21 November Eisenhower spoke highly of Macmillan A straight fine man and so far as he is concerned the outstanding one of the British he served with during the war 128 129 On the evening of 22 November 1956 Butler who had just announced British withdrawal addressed the 1922 committee Conservative backbenchers with Macmillan After Butler s downbeat remarks ten minutes or so in length Macmillan delivered a stirring thirty five minute speech described by Enoch Powell as one of the most horrible things that I remember in politics Macmillan with all the skill of the old actor manager succeeded in false footing Rab The sheer devilry of it verged upon the disgusting He expounded on his metaphor that henceforth the British must aim to be Greeks in the Roman Empire and according to Philip Goodhart s recollection almost knocked Butler off his chair with his expansive arm gestures Macmillan wrote I held the Tory Party for the weekend it was all I intended to do Macmillan had further meetings with Aldrich and Winston Churchill after Eden left for Jamaica 23 November while briefing journalists disingenuously that he planned to retire and go to the Lords 130 131 He was also hinting that he would not serve under Butler 132 Butler later recorded that during his period as acting Head of Government at Number Ten he noticed constant comings and goings of ministers to Macmillan s study in Number 11 next door and that those who attended all seemed to receive promotions when Macmillan became Prime Minister Macmillan had opposed Eden s trip to Jamaica and told Butler 15 December the day after Eden s return that younger members of the Cabinet wanted Eden out 133 Macmillan argued at Cabinet on 4 January that Suez should be regarded as a strategic retreat like Mons or Dunkirk This did not meet with Eden s approval at Cabinet on 7 January 134 His political standing destroyed Eden resigned on grounds of ill health on 9 January 1957 135 At that time the Conservative Party had no formal mechanism for selecting a new leader and the Queen appointed Macmillan Prime Minister after taking advice from Churchill and the Marquess of Salisbury who had asked the Cabinet individually for their opinions all but two or three opting for Macmillan This surprised some observers who had expected that Eden s deputy Rab Butler would be chosen 136 The political situation after Suez was so desperate that on taking office on 10 January he told the Queen he could not guarantee his government would last six weeks though ultimately he would be in charge of the government for more than six years 137 Prime Minister 1957 1963 edit nbsp Premiership of Harold Macmillan 10 January 1957 18 October 1963MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterHarold MacmillanCabinetMacmillan ministryPartyConservativeElection1959Seat10 Downing Street Anthony EdenAlec Douglas Home nbsp Coat of arms of HM GovernmentFurther information Conservative government 1957 1964 First government 1957 1959 edit From the start of his premiership Macmillan set out to portray an image of calm and style in contrast to his excitable predecessor He silenced the klaxon on the Prime Ministerial car which Eden had used frequently He advertised his love of reading Anthony Trollope and Jane Austen and on the door of the Private Secretaries room at Number Ten he hung a quote from The Gondoliers Quiet calm deliberation disentangles every knot 138 Macmillan filled government posts with 35 Old Etonians seven of them in Cabinet 139 He was also devoted to family members when Andrew Cavendish 11th Duke of Devonshire was later appointed Minister for Colonial Affairs from 1963 to 1964 among other positions he described his uncle s behaviour as the greatest act of nepotism ever 140 Macmillan s Defence Minister Duncan Sandys wrote at the time Eden had no gift for leadership under Macmillan as PM everything is better Cabinet meetings are quite transformed 141 Many ministers found Macmillan to be more decisive and brisk than either Churchill or Eden had been 141 Another of Macmillan s ministers Charles Hill stated that Macmillan dominated Cabinet meetings by sheer superiority of mind and of judgement 142 Macmillan frequently made allusions to history literature and the classics at cabinet meetings giving him a reputation as being both learned and entertaining though many ministers found his manner too authoritarian 142 Macmillan had no inner cabinet and instead maintained one on one relationships with a few senior ministers such as Rab Butler who usually served as acting prime minister when Macmillan was on one of his frequent visits abroad 142 Selwyn Lloyd described Macmillan as treating most of his ministers like junior officers in a unit he commanded 142 Lloyd recalled that Macmillan regarded the Cabinet as an instrument to play upon a body to be molded to his will very rarely did he fail to get his way 142 Macmillan generally allowed his ministers much leeway in managing their portfolios and only intervened if he felt something had gone wrong 141 Macmillan was especially close to his three private secretaries Tom Bligh Freddie Bishop and Philip de Zulueta who were his favourite advisers 142 Many cabinet ministers often complained that Macmillan took the advice of his private secretaries more seriously than he did their own 142 He was nicknamed Supermac in 1958 by the cartoonist Victor Weisz who intended to suggest that Macmillan was trying set himself up as a Superman figure 142 It was intended as mockery but backfired coming to be used in a neutral or friendly fashion Weisz tried to label him with other names including Mac the Knife at the time of widespread cabinet changes in 1962 but none caught on 143 Economy edit Besides foreign affairs the economy was Macmillan s other prime concern 144 His One Nation approach to the economy was to seek high or full employment especially with a general election looming This contrasted with the Treasury ministers who argued that support of sterling required spending cuts and probably a rise in unemployment Their advice was rejected and in January 1958 the three Treasury ministers Peter Thorneycroft the Chancellor of the Exchequer Nigel Birch Economic Secretary to the Treasury and Enoch Powell the Financial Secretary to the Treasury and seen as their intellectual ringleader resigned D R Thorpe argues that this coming after the resignations of Labour ministers Aneurin Bevan John Freeman and Harold Wilson in April 1951 who had wanted higher expenditure and the cuts made by Butler and Macmillan as Chancellors in 1955 56 was another step in the development of stop go economics as opposed to prudent medium term management 145 Macmillan away on a tour of the Commonwealth brushed aside this incident as a little local difficulty He bore no grudge against Thorneycroft and brought him and Powell of whom he was more wary back into the government in 1960 146 This period also saw the first stirrings of more active monetary policy Official bank rate which had been kept low since the 1930s was hiked in September 1958 145 The change in bank rate prompted rumours in the City that some financiers who were Bank of England directors with senior positions in private firms took advantage of advance knowledge of the rate change in what resembled insider trading Political pressure mounted on the Government and Macmillan agreed to the 1957 Bank Rate Tribunal Hearing evidence in the winter of 1957 and reporting in January 1958 this inquiry exonerated all involved in what some journalists perceived to be a whitewash 147 Domestic policies edit During his time as prime minister average living standards steadily rose 148 while numerous social reforms were carried out The Clean Air Act 1956 was passed during his time as Chancellor his premiership saw the passage of the Housing Act 1957 the Offices Act 1960 the Noise Abatement Act 1960 149 and the Factories Act 1961 the introduction of a graduated pension scheme to provide an additional income to retirees 150 the establishment of a Child s Special Allowance for the orphaned children of divorced parents 151 and a reduction in the standard work week from 48 to 42 hours 152 page needed Foreign policy edit nbsp Macmillan with Indian Minister and head of Indian delegation Ashoke Kumar Sen and wife Anjana daughter of Sudhi Ranjan Das nbsp Macmillan meeting Eisenhower in BermudaMacmillan took close control of foreign policy He worked to narrow the post Suez Crisis 1956 rift with the United States where his wartime friendship with Eisenhower was key the two had a productive conference in Bermuda as early as March 1957 In February 1959 Macmillan visited the Soviet Union Talks with Nikita Khrushchev eased tensions in east west relations over West Berlin and led to an agreement in principle to stop nuclear tests and to hold a further summit meeting of Allied and Soviet heads of government 153 In the Middle East faced by the 1958 collapse of the Baghdad Pact and the spread of Soviet influence Macmillan acted decisively to restore the confidence of Persian Gulf allies using the Royal Air Force and special forces to defeat a revolt backed by Saudi Arabia and Egypt against the Sultan of Oman Said bin Taimur in July 1957 154 deploying airborne battalions to defend Jordan against United Arab Republican subversion in July 1958 155 and deterring Iraqi demands of Kuwait by landing a brigade group in June 1961 during the Iraq Kuwait crisis of 1961 156 Macmillan was a major proponent and architect of decolonisation The Gold Coast was granted independence as Ghana and the Federation of Malaya achieved independence within the Commonwealth of Nations in 1957 The material strength of the Old Commonwealth members if joined with the moral influence of the Asiatic members meant that a united Commonwealth would always have a very powerful voice in world affairs said Macmillan in a 1957 speech during a tour of the former British Empire 157 Nuclear weapons edit nbsp First successful British H bomb test Operation Grapple X Round C1 which took place over KiritimatiIn April 1957 Macmillan reaffirmed his strong support for the British nuclear weapons programme A succession of prime ministers since the Second World War had been determined to persuade the United States to revive wartime co operation in the area of nuclear weapons research Macmillan believed that one way to encourage such co operation would be for the United Kingdom to speed up the development of its own hydrogen bomb which was successfully tested on 8 November 1957 Macmillan s decision led to increased demands on the Windscale and subsequently Calder Hall nuclear plants to produce plutonium for military purposes 158 As a result safety margins for radioactive materials inside the Windscale reactor were eroded This contributed to the Windscale fire on the night of 10 October 1957 which broke out in the plutonium plant of Pile No 1 and nuclear contaminants travelled up a chimney where the filters blocked some but not all of the contaminated material The radioactive cloud spread to south east England and fallout reached mainland Europe Although scientists had warned of the dangers of such an accident for some time the government blamed the workers who had put out the fire for an error of judgement rather than the political pressure for fast tracking the megaton bomb 159 160 Concerned that public confidence in the nuclear programme might be shaken and that technical information might be misused by opponents of defence co operation in the US Congress Macmillan withheld all but the summary of a report into the fire prepared for the Atomic Energy Authority by Sir William Penney director of the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment 161 Subsequently released files show that Macmillan s cuts were few and covered up few technical details 162 and that even the full report found no danger to public health but later official estimates acknowledged that the release of polonium 210 may have led directly to 25 to 50 deaths and anti nuclear groups linked it to 1 000 fatal cancers 163 164 On 25 March 1957 Macmillan acceded to Eisenhower s request to base 60 Thor IRBMs in England under joint control to replace the nuclear bombers of the Strategic Air Command which had been stationed under joint control since 1948 and were approaching obsolescence Partly as a consequence of this favour in late October 1957 the US McMahon Act was eased to facilitate nuclear co operation between the two governments initially with a view to producing cleaner weapons and reducing the need for duplicate testing 165 The Mutual Defence Agreement followed on 3 July 1958 speeding up British ballistic missile development 166 notwithstanding unease expressed at the time about the impetus co operation might give to atomic proliferation by arousing the jealousy of France and other allies 167 Macmillan saw an opportunity to increase British influence over the United States with the launching of the Soviet satellite Sputnik which caused a severe crisis of confidence in the United States as Macmillan wrote in his diary The Russian success in launching the satellite has been something equivalent to Pearl Harbour The American cockiness is shaken President is under severe attack for the first time The atmosphere is now such that almost anything might be decided however revolutionary 168 The revolutionary change that Macmillan sought was a more equal Anglo American partnership as he used the Sputnik crisis to press Eisenhower to in turn press Congress to repeal the 1946 MacMahon Act which forbade the United States to share nuclear technology with foreign governments a goal accomplished by the end of 1957 169 In addition Macmillan succeeded in having Eisenhower to agree to set up Anglo American working groups to examine foreign policy problems and for what he called the Declaration of Interdependence a title not used by the Americans who called it the Declaration of Common Purpose which he believed marked the beginning of a new era of Anglo American partnership 170 Subsequently Macmillan was to learn that neither Eisenhower nor Kennedy shared the assumption that he applied to the Declaration of Interdependence that the American president and the British Prime Minister had equal power over the decisions of war and peace 171 Macmillan believed that the American policies towards the Soviet Union were too rigid and confrontational and favoured a policy of detente with the aim of relaxing Cold War tensions 172 1959 general election edit Macmillan led the Conservatives to victory in the 1959 general election increasing his party s majority from 60 to 100 seats The campaign was based on the economic improvements achieved as well as the low unemployment and improving standard of living the slogan Life s Better Under the Conservatives was matched by Macmillan s own 1957 remark indeed let us be frank about it most of our people have never had it so good 173 usually paraphrased as You ve never had it so good Such rhetoric reflected a new reality of working class affluence it has been argued that the key factor in the Conservative victory was that average real pay for industrial workers had risen since Churchill s 1951 victory by over 20 per cent 174 The scale of the victory meant that not only had the Conservatives won three successive general elections but they had also increased their majority each time It sparked debate as to whether Labour now led by Hugh Gaitskell could win a general election again The standard of living had risen enough that workers could participate in a consumer economy shifting the working class concerns away from traditional Labour Party views 175 Second government 1959 1963 edit Economy edit Britain s balance of payments problems led Chancellor Selwyn Lloyd to impose a seven month wage freeze in 1961 176 and amongst other factors this caused the government to lose popularity and a series of by elections in March 1962 of which the most famous was Orpington on 14 March 177 Butler leaked to the Daily Mail on 11 July 1962 that a major reshuffle was imminent 178 Macmillan feared for his own position and later 1 August claimed to Lloyd that Butler who sat for a rural East Anglian seat likely to suffer from EC agricultural protectionism had been planning to split the party over EC entry there is no evidence that this was so 179 In the 1962 cabinet reshuffle known as the Night of the Long Knives Macmillan sacked eight Ministers including Selwyn Lloyd The Cabinet changes were widely seen as a sign of panic and the young Liberal MP Jeremy Thorpe said of Macmillan s dismissals greater love hath no man than this than to lay down his friends for his life Macmillan was openly criticised by his predecessor Lord Avon an almost unprecedented act 180 Macmillan supported the creation of the National Economic Development Council NEDC known as Neddy which was announced in the summer of 1961 and first met in 1962 However the National Incomes Commission NIC known as Nicky set up in October 1962 to institute controls on income as part of his growth without inflation policy proved less effective This was largely due to employers and the Trades Union Congress TUC boycotting it 176 A further series of subtle indicators and controls was introduced during his premiership The report The Reshaping of British Railways 181 or Beeching I report was published on 27 March 1963 The report starts by quoting the brief provided by the Prime Minister Harold Macmillan from 1960 First the industry must be of a size and pattern suited to modern conditions and prospects In particular the railway system must be modelled to meet current needs and the modernisation plan must be adapted to this new shape note 1 and with the premise that the railways should be run as a profitable business note 2 This led to the notorious Beeching Axe destroying many miles of permanent way and severing towns from the railway network Foreign policy edit nbsp Macmillan left on 1 August 1961 in Valkeakoski Finland In the middle the Finnish Minister Ahti Karjalainen and Sir Anthony Lambert standing to the right In the age of jet aircraft Macmillan travelled more than any previous Prime Minister apart from Lloyd George who made many trips to conferences in 1919 22 182 Macmillan planned an important role in setting up a four power summit in Paris to discuss the Berlin crisis that was supposed to open in May 1960 but which Khrushchev refused to attend owing to the U 2 incident 183 Macmillan pressed Eisenhower to apologise to Khrushchev which the president refused to do 184 Macmillan s failure to make Eisenhower say sorry to Khrushchev forced him to reconsider his Greeks and Romans foreign policy as he privately conceded that could no longer talk usefully to the Americans 184 The failure of the Paris summit changed Macmillan s attitude towards the European Economic Community which he started to see as a counterbalance to American power 185 At the same time the Anglo American working groups which Macmillan attached such importance to turned out to be largely ineffective as the Americans did not wish to have their options limited by a British veto by in fighting between agencies of the U S government such as the State Department Defense Department etc and because of the Maclean Burgess affair of 1951 the Americans believed the British government was full of Soviet spies and thus could not be trusted 185 Relations with the United States edit The special relationship with the United States continued after the election of President John F Kennedy whose sister Kathleen Cavendish had married William Cavendish Marquess of Hartington the nephew of Macmillan s wife Macmillan initially was concerned that the Irish American Catholic Kennedy might be an Anglophobe which led Macmillan who knew of Kennedy s special interest in the Third World to suggest that Britain and the United States spend more money on aid to the Third World 186 The emphasis on aid to the Third World also coincided well with Macmillan s one nation conservatism as he wrote in a letter to Kennedy advocating reforms to capitalism to ensure full employment If we fail in this Communism will triumph not by war or even by subversion but by seemingly to be a better way of bringing people material comforts 186 Macmillan was scheduled to visit the United States in April 1961 but with the Pathet Lao winning a series of victories in the Laotian civil war Macmillan was summoned on what he called the Laos dash for an emergency summit with Kennedy in Key West on 26 March 1961 187 Macmillan was strongly opposed to the idea of sending British troops to fight in Laos but was afraid of damaging relations with the United States if he did not making him very apprehensive as he set out for Key West especially as he had never met Kennedy before 188 Macmillan was especially opposed to intervention in Laos as he had been warned by his Chiefs of Staff on 4 January 1961 that if Western troops entered Laos then China would probably intervene in Laos as Mao Zedong had made it quite clear he would not accept Western forces in any nation that bordered China 189 The same report stated that a war with China in Laos would be a bottomless pit in which our limited military resources would rapidly disappear 189 Kennedy for his part wanted Britain to commit forces to Laos if the United States did for political reasons Kennedy wanted to avoid the charge that the United States would be acting unilaterally in Southeast Asia if it did intervene in Laos and because Britain was a member of SEATO and he would face domestic criticism if the United States was the only SEATO member to fight in Laos For these reasons Kennedy was adamant that if the United States intervened in Laos then he expected the United Kingdom to likewise do so 190 The meeting in Key West was very tense as Macmillan was heard to mutter He s pushing me hard but I won t give way 188 However Macmillan did reluctantly agree if the Americans intervened in Laos then so too would Britain The Laos crisis had a major crisis in Anglo Thai relations as the Thais pressed for armed forces of all SEATO members to brought to Charter Yellow a state of heightened alert that the British representative to SEATO vetoed 191 The Thais wanted to change the voting procedure for SEATO from requiring unanimous consent to a three quarter majority a measure that Britain vetoed causing the Thais to lose interest in SEATO 192 The failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961 made Kennedy distrust the hawkish advice he received from the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the CIA and he ultimately decided against intervention in Laos much to Macmillan s private relief Macmillan s second meeting with Kennedy in April 1961 was friendlier and his third meeting in London in June 1961 after Kennedy had been bested by Khrushchev at a summit in Vienna even more so It was at his third meeting in London that Macmillan started to assume the mantle of an elder statesman who offered Kennedy encouragement and his experience that formed a lasting friendship 193 Believing that personal diplomacy was the best way to influence Kennedy Macmillan appointed David Ormsby Gore as his ambassador in Washington as he was a long time friend of the Kennedy family whom he had known since the 1930s when Kennedy s father had served as the American ambassador in London 194 He was supportive throughout the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 and Kennedy consulted him by telephone every day The Ambassador David Ormsby Gore was a close family friend of the President and actively involved in White House discussions on how to resolve the crisis 195 About the Congo crisis Macmillan clashed with Kennedy as he was against having United Nations forces put an end to the secessionist regime of Katanga backed by Belgium and the Western mining companies which he claimed would destabilise the Central African Federation 196 By contrast Kennedy felt that the regime of Katanga was a Belgian puppet state and its mere existence was damaging to the prestige of the West in the Third World Over Macmillan s objections Kennedy decided to have the United Nations forces to evict the white mercenaries from Katanga and reintegrate Katanga into the Congo 196 For his part Kennedy pressed Macmillan unsuccessfully to have Britain join the American economic embargo against Cuba 196 Macmillan told his Foreign Secretary Lord Home there is no reason for us to help the Americans with Cuba 196 Macmillan was a supporter of the nuclear test ban treaty of 1963 and in the first half of 1963 he had Ormsby Gore quietly apply pressure on Kennedy to resume the talks in the spring of 1963 when negotiations became stalled Feeling that the Secretary of State Dean Rusk was being obstructionist Macmillan telephoned Kennedy on 11 April 1963 to suggest a joint letter to Khrushchev to break the impasse 197 Through Khrushchev s reply to the Macmillan Kennedy letter was mostly negative Macmillan pressed Kennedy to take up the one positive aspect in his reply namely that if a senior Anglo American team would arrive in Moscow he would welcome them to discuss how best to proceed about a nuclear test ban treaty 197 The two envoys who arrived in Moscow were W Averell Harriman representing the United States and Lord Hailsham representing the United Kingdom 198 Through Lord Hailsham s role was largely that of an observer the talks between Harriman and the Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko resulted in the breakthrough that led to the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of August 1963 banning all above ground nuclear tests 198 Macmillan had a pressing domestic reasons for the nuclear test ban treaty Newsreel footage of Soviet and American nuclear tests throughout the 1950s had terrified segments of the British public who were highly concerned about the possibility of weapons with such destructive power be used against British cities and led to the foundation of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament CND whose rallies in the late 1950s early 1960s calling for British nuclear disarmament were well attended Macmillan believed in the value of nuclear weapons both as a deterrent against the Soviet Union and to maintain Britain s claim to be great power but he was also worried about the popularity of the CND 199 For Macmillan banning above ground nuclear tests which generated film footage of the ominous mushroom clouds raising far above the earth was the best way to dent the appeal of the CND and in this the Partial Nuclear Ban Treaty of 1963 was successful 199 Wind of Change edit nbsp British decolonisation in Africa nbsp Macmillan meets the Litunga of the Barotse in Northern Rhodesia 1960Macmillan s first government had seen the first phase of the sub Saharan African independence movement which accelerated under his second government 200 The most problematic of the colonies was the Central African Federation which had united Northern Rhodesia Southern Rhodesia and Nyasaland together in 1953 largely out of the fear that the white population of Southern Rhodesia modern Zimbabwe might want to join South Africa which had since 1948 had been led by Afrikaner nationalists distinctly unfriendly to Britain 201 Through the Central African Federation had been presented as a multi racial attempt to develop the region the federation had been unstable right from the start with the black population charging that the whites had been given a privileged position 201 Macmillan felt that if the costs of holding onto a particular territory outweighed the benefits then it should be dispensed with During the Kenyan Emergency the British authorities tried to protect the Kikuyu population from the Mau Mau guerrillas who called themselves the Land and Freedom Army by interning the Kikuyu in camps A scandal erupted when the guards at the Hola camp publicly beat 11 prisoners to death on 3 March 1959 which attracted much adverse publicity as the news filtered out from Kenya to the United Kingdom 201 Many in the British media compared the living conditions in the Kenyan camps to the concentration camps of Nazi Germany saying that the people in the camps were emaciated and sickly The report of the Devlin Commission in July 1959 concerning the suppression of demonstrators in Nyasaland modern day Malawi called Nyasaland a police state 201 In the aftermath of criticism about colonial policies in Kenya and Nyasland Macmillan from 1959 onward started to see the African colonies as a liability arguing at cabinet meetings that the level of force required to hang onto them would result in more domestic criticism international opprobrium costly wars and would allow the Soviet Union to establish influence in the Third World by supporting self styled liberation movements that would just make things worse 201 After securing a third term for the Conservatives in 1959 he appointed Iain Macleod as Colonial Secretary Macleod greatly accelerated decolonisation and by the time he was moved to Conservative Party chairman and Leader of the Commons in 1961 he had made the decision to give independence to Nigeria Tanganyika Kenya Nyasaland as Malawi and Northern Rhodesia as Zambia 202 Macmillan embarked on his Wind of Change tour of Africa starting in Ghana on 6 January 1960 He made the famous wind of change speech in Cape Town on 3 February 1960 203 It is considered a landmark in the process of decolonisation nbsp Macmillan meets Egypt s President Gamal Abdel Nasser on the sidelines of United Nations General Assembly 1960Nigeria the Southern Cameroons and British Somaliland were granted independence in 1960 Sierra Leone and Tanganyika in 1961 Trinidad and Tobago and Uganda in 1962 and Kenya in 1963 Zanzibar merged with Tanganyika to form Tanzania in 1963 All remained within the Commonwealth except British Somaliland which merged with Italian Somaliland to form Somalia Macmillan s policy overrode the hostility of white minorities and the Conservative Monday Club South Africa left the multiracial Commonwealth in 1961 and Macmillan acquiesced to the dissolution of the Central African Federation by the end of 1963 In Southeast Asia Malaya Sabah British North Borneo Sarawak and Singapore became independent as Malaysia in 1963 Because Singapore with its ethnic Chinese majority was the largest and wealthiest city in the region Macmillan was afraid that a federation of Malaya and Singapore together would result in a Chinese majority state and insisted on including Sarawak and British North Borneo into the federation of Malaysia to ensure the new state was a Malay majority state 204 During the Malaya Emergency the majority of the Communist guerrillas were ethnic Chinese and British policies tended to favour the Muslim Malays whose willingness to follow their sultans and imams made them more anti communist Southeast Asia was a region where racial ethno religious politics predominated and the substantial Chinese minorities in the region were widely disliked on the account of their greater economic success 205 Macmillan wanted Britain to retain military bases in the new state of Malaysia to ensure that Britain was a military power in Asia and thus he wanted the new state of Malaysia to have a pro Western government 204 This aim was best achieved by having the same Malay elite who had worked with the British colonial authorities serve as the new elite in Malaysia hence Macmillan s desire to have a Malay majority who would vote for Malay politicians 204 Macmillan especially wanted to keep the British base at Singapore which he like other prime ministers saw as the linchpin of British power in Asia 206 The Indonesian president Sukarno strongly objected to the new federation claiming on somewhat dubious grounds that all of Malaysia should be included in Indonesia 207 On 8 December 1962 Indonesia sponsored a rebellion in the British protectorate of Brunei leading to Macmillan to dispatch Gurkhas to put down the rebellion against the sultan 208 In January 1963 Sukarno started a policy of konfrontasi confrontation with Britain 206 Macmillan detested Sukarno partly because he had been a Japanese collaborator in World War Two and partly because of his fondness for elaborate uniforms despite never having personally fought in a war offended the World War I veteran Macmillan who had a strong contempt for any man who had not seen combat 209 In his diary Macmillan called Sukarno a cross between Liberace and Little Lord Fauntleroy 210 Macmillan felt that giving in to Sukarno s demands would be appeasement and clashed with Kennedy over the issue 209 Sukarno was the leader of the most populous nation in Southeast Asia and though officially neutral in the Cold War tended to take anti Western positions and Kennedy favoured accommodating him to bring him closer to the West for example supporting Indonesia s claim to Dutch New Guinea even through the Netherlands was a NATO ally 209 Macmillan feared the expenses of an all out war with Indonesia but also felt to give in to Sukarno would damage British prestige writing on 5 August 1963 that Britain s position in Asia would be untenable if Sukarno were to triumph over Britain in the same manner he had over the Dutch in New Guinea 211 To help reduce the expenses of the war Macmillan appealed to the Australian Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies to send troops to defend Malaysia On 25 September 1963 Sukarno announced in a speech that Indonesia would ganyang Mayaysia gobble Malaysia raw and on the same day a mob burned down the British embassy in Jakarta 206 The result was the Indonesian Confrontation an undeclared war between Britain vs Indonesia that began in 1963 and continued to 1966 212 The speedy transfer of power maintained the goodwill of the new nations but critics contended it was premature In justification Macmillan quoted Lord Macaulay in 1851 Many politicians of our time are in the habit of laying it down as a self evident proposition that no people ought to be free until they are fit to use their freedom The maxim is worthy of the fool in the old story who resolved not to go into the water until he had learnt to swim If men are to wait for liberty until they become wise and good in slavery they may indeed wait for ever 213 Skybolt crisis edit nbsp Macmillan and John F Kennedy confer in 1961Macmillan cancelled the Blue Streak ballistic missile in April 1960 over concerns about its vulnerability to a pre emptive attack but continued with the development of the air launched Blue Steel stand off missile which was about to enter trials For the replacement for Blue Steel he opted for Britain to join the American Skybolt missile project From the same year Macmillan permitted the US Navy to station Polaris submarines at Holy Loch Scotland as a replacement for Thor When Skybolt was unilaterally cancelled by US Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara Macmillan negotiated with President Kennedy the purchase of Polaris missiles under the Nassau agreement in December 1962 citation needed Europe edit Macmillan worked with states outside the European Communities EC to form the European Free Trade Association EFTA which from 3 May 1960 established a free trade area As the EC proved to be an economic success membership of the EC started to look more attractive compared to the EFTA 214 A report from Sir Frank Lee of the Treasury in April 1960 predicated that the three major power blocs in the decades to come would be those headed by the United States the Soviet Union and the EC and argued to avoid isolation Britain would to have decisively associate itself with one of the power blocs 214 Macmillan wrote in his diary about his decision to apply to join the EC Shall we be caught between a hostile or at least less and less friendly America and a boastful powerful Empire of Charlemagne now under French but later bound to come under German control It s a grim choice 214 Through Macmillan had decided upon joining the EC in 1960 he waited until July 1961 to formally make the application for he feared the reaction of the Conservative Party backbenchers the farmers lobby and the populist newspaper chain owned by the right wing Canadian millionaire Lord Beaverbrook who saw Britain joining the EC as a betrayal of the British empire 214 As expected the Beaverbrook newspapers whose readers tended to vote Conservative offered up ferocious criticism of Macmillan s application to join the EC accusing him of betrayal Negotiations to join the EC were complicated by Macmillan s desire to allow Britain to continue its traditional policy of importing food from the Commonwealth nations of Australia New Zealand and Canada which led the EC nations especially France to accuse Britain of negotiating in bad faith 214 Macmillan also saw the value of rapprochement with the EC to which his government sought belated entry but Britain s application was vetoed by French president Charles de Gaulle on 29 January 1963 De Gaulle was always strongly opposed to British entry for many reasons He sensed the British were inevitably closely linked to the Americans He saw the European Communities as a continental arrangement primarily between France and Germany and felt that if Britain joined France s role would diminish 215 216 Partial Test Ban Treaty 1963 edit Macmillan s previous attempt to create an agreement at the May 1960 summit in Paris had collapsed due to the 1960 U 2 incident He was a force in the negotiations leading to the signing of the 1963 Partial Test Ban Treaty by the United Kingdom the United States and the Soviet Union He sent Lord Hailsham to negotiate the Test Ban Treaty a sign that he was grooming him as a potential successor 217 President Kennedy visited Macmillan s country home Birch Grove on 29 30 June 1963 for talks about the planned Multilateral Force They never met again and this was to be Kennedy s last visit to the UK He was assassinated in November shortly after the end of Macmillan s premiership 218 End of premiership edit By the early 1960s many were starting to find Macmillan s courtly and urbane Edwardian manners anachronistic and satirical journals such as Private Eye and the television show That Was the Week That Was mercilessly mocked him as a doddering clueless leader 219 Macmillan s handling of the Vassall affair in which an Admiralty clerk John Vassall was convicted in October 1962 of passing secrets to the Soviet Union undermined his Super Mac reputation for competence 219 D R Thorpe writes that from January 1963 Macmillan s strategy lay in ruins leaving him looking for a graceful exit The Vassall affair turned the press against him 220 In the same month opposition leader Hugh Gaitskell died suddenly at the age of 56 With a general election due before the end of the following year Gaitskell s death threw the future of British politics into fresh doubt 221 The following month Harold Wilson was elected as the new Labour leader and he proved to be a popular choice with the public 222 Profumo affair edit The Profumo affair of 1963 permanently damaged the credibility of Macmillan s government The revelation of the affair between John Profumo Secretary of State for War and an alleged call girl Christine Keeler who was simultaneously sleeping with the Soviet naval attache Captain Yevgeny Ivanov made it appear that Macmillan had lost control of his government and of events in general 223 In the ensuing Parliamentary debate he was seen as a pathetic figure while Nigel Birch declared in the words of Browning on Wordsworth that it would be Never glad confident morning again 224 On 17 June 1963 he survived a Parliamentary vote with a majority of 69 225 one fewer than had been thought necessary for his survival and was afterwards joined in the smoking room only by his son and son in law not by any Cabinet minister However Butler and Reginald Maudling who was very popular with backbench MPs at that time declined to push for his resignation especially after a tide of support from Conservative activists around the country Many of the salacious revelations about the sex lives of Establishment figures during the Profumo affair damaged the image of the Establishment that Macmillan was seen as a part of giving him the image by 1963 of a failing representative of a decadent elite 223 Resignation edit By the summer of 1963 Conservative Party Chairman Lord Poole was urging the ageing Macmillan to retire 217 The full Denning report into the Profumo Scandal was published on 26 September 1963 226 Macmillan had a meeting with Butler on 11 September and was careful to keep his options open retire now retire in the New Year or fight the next election He talked the matter over with his son Maurice and other senior ministers Over lunch with Lord Swinton on 30 September he favoured stepping down but only if Baron Hailsham could be shoehorned in as his successor He saw Butler on the morning of 7 October and told him he planned to stay on to lead the Conservatives into the next General Election then was struck down by prostate problems on the night of 7 8 October on the eve of the Conservative Party conference 227 228 Macmillan was operated on at 11 30 am on 10 October Although it is sometimes stated that he believed himself to have inoperable prostate cancer he in fact knew it was benign before the operation 229 Macmillan was almost ready to leave hospital within ten days of the diagnosis and could easily have carried on in the opinion of his doctor Sir John Richardson 230 His illness gave him a way out 231 Succession edit While recovering in hospital Macmillan wrote a memorandum dated 14 October recommending the process by which soundings would be taken of party opinion to select his successor which was accepted by the Cabinet on 15 October This time backbench MPs and junior ministers were to be asked their opinion rather than just the Cabinet as in 1957 and efforts would be made to sample opinion amongst peers and constituency activists 231 Enoch Powell claimed that it was wrong of Macmillan to seek to monopolise the advice given to the Queen in this way In fact this was done at the Palace s request so that the Queen was not being seen to be involved in politics as had happened in January 1957 and had been decided as far back as June when it had looked as though the government might fall over the Profumo scandal Ben Pimlott later described this as the biggest political misjudgement of her reign 232 233 Macmillan was succeeded by Foreign Secretary Alec Douglas Home in a controversial move it was alleged that Macmillan had pulled strings and utilised the party s grandees nicknamed The Magic Circle who had slanted their soundings of opinion among MPs and Cabinet Ministers to ensure that Butler was once again not chosen 234 He finally resigned receiving the Queen from his hospital bed on 18 October 1963 after nearly seven years as prime minister He felt privately that he was being hounded from office by a backbench minority Some few will be content with the success they have had in the assassination of their leader and will not care very much who the successor is They are a band that in the end does not amount to more than 15 or 20 at the most 235 Retirement 1963 1986 edit nbsp Macmillan with Queen Elizabeth II in 1985Macmillan initially refused a peerage and retired from politics in September 1964 a month before the 1964 election which the Conservatives narrowly lost to Labour now led by Harold Wilson 236 His service in the House of Commons totalled 37 years Oxford chancellor 1960 1986 edit Macmillan had been elected Chancellor of the University of Oxford in 1960 in a campaign masterminded by Hugh Trevor Roper and held this office for the rest of his life frequently presiding over college events making speeches and tirelessly raising funds According to Sir Patrick Neill QC the vice chancellor Macmillan would talk late into the night with eager groups of students who were often startled by the radical views he put forward well into his last decade 237 Return to Macmillan Publishers edit In retirement Macmillan took up the chairmanship of his family s publishing house Macmillan Publishers from 1964 to 1974 The publishing firm remained in family hands until a majority share was purchased in 1995 by the Holtzbrinck Publishing Group the imprint persists Macmillan brought out a six volume autobiography Winds of Change 1914 1939 1966 ISBN 0 333 06639 1 The Blast of War 1939 1945 1967 ISBN 0 333 00358 6 Tides of Fortune 1945 1955 1969 ISBN 0 333 04077 5 Riding the Storm 1956 1959 1971 ISBN 0 333 10310 6 Pointing the Way 1959 1961 1972 ISBN 0 333 12411 1 At the End of the Day 1961 1963 1973 ISBN 0 333 12413 8Macmillan s biographer acknowledges that his memoirs were considered heavy going 238 Reading these volumes was said by Macmillan s political enemy Enoch Powell to induce a sensation akin to that of chewing on cardboard 239 Butler wrote in his review of Riding the Storm Altogether this massive work will keep anybody busy for several weeks 240 Macmillan s wartime diaries were better received War Diaries Politics and War in the Mediterranean January 1943 May 1945 London St Martin s Press 1984 ISBN 0 312 85566 4Since Macmillan s death his diaries for the 1950s and 1960s have also been published both edited by Peter Catterall The Macmillan Diaries The Cabinet Years 1950 57 London Macmillan 2003 ISBN 0 333 71167 X The Macmillan Diaries Vol II Prime Minister and After 1957 1966 London Macmillan 2011 ISBN 1 405 04721 6Macmillan burned his diary for the climax of the Suez Affair supposedly at Eden s request although in Campbell s view more likely to protect his own reputation 241 London clubs edit Macmillan was a member of many clubs On his first evening as Prime Minister he made a public show of taking the Chief Whip Edward Heath for oysters at the Turf Club 138 He became President of the Carlton Club in 1977 and would often stay at the club when he had to stay in London overnight Within a few months of becoming President he merged the Carlton and Junior Carlton He was also a member of Buck s Pratt s the Turf Club and Beefsteak Club He also once commented that White s was 75 gentlemen and 25 crooks the perfect combination for a club 242 Political interventions edit Macmillan made occasional political interventions in retirement Responding to a remark made by Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson about not having boots in which to go to school Macmillan retorted If Mr Wilson did not have boots to go to school that is because he was too big for them 243 Macmillan accepted the Order of Merit in 1976 244 In October of that year he called for a Government of National Unity including all parties which could command the public support to resolve the economic crisis Asked who could lead such a coalition he replied Mr Gladstone formed his last Government when he was eighty three I m only eighty two You mustn t put temptation in my way 245 He discussed the idea with Eden but the IMF loan saved the country and the Labour government 245 Macmillan still travelled widely visiting China in October 1979 where he held talks with senior Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping 246 Relations with Margaret Thatcher edit nbsp Macmillan became critical of Margaret Thatcher pictured in 1975 Macmillan found himself drawn more actively into politics after Margaret Thatcher became Conservative leader in February 1975 247 After she ended Labour s five year rule and became Prime Minister in May 1979 248 he told Nigel Fisher his biographer and himself a Conservative MP Ted Heath was a very good No2 pause not a leader pause Now you have a real leader long pause Whether she s leading you in the right direction 249 The record of Macmillan s own premiership came under attack from the monetarists in the party whose theories Thatcher supported 250 27 In a celebrated speech he wondered aloud where such theories had come from Was it America Or was it Tibet It is quite true many of Your Lordships will remember it operating in the nursery How do you treat a cold One nanny said Feed a cold she was a neo Keynesian The other said Starve a cold she was a monetarist 251 Macmillan was one of several people who advised Thatcher to set up a small War Cabinet to manage the Falklands War 252 On his advice she excluded the Treasury from this body 250 148 Having first inquired whether Argentina was known to have atomic weapons Macmillan s advice was to appoint a senior military advisor as Pug Ismay had been in the Second World War in the event Admiral Lewin Chief of Defence Staff performed this role She had already received advice to exclude the Treasury from Frank Cooper the Permanent Under Secretary for Defence not least because of Macmillan s own behaviour as Chancellor in demanding a halt to the Suez operation 253 She later recalled I never regretted following Harold Macmillan s advice We were never tempted to compromise the security of our forces for financial reasons Everything we did was governed by military necessity 254 188 With hereditary peerages again being created under Thatcher Macmillan requested the earldom that had been customarily bestowed to departing prime ministers and on 24 February 1984 he was created Earl of Stockton and Viscount Macmillan of Ovenden 255 He is the last Prime Minister to have been given an hereditary peerage He took the title from his former parliamentary seat on the edge of the Durham coalfields and in his maiden speech in the House of Lords he criticised Thatcher s handling of the coal miners strike and her characterisation of striking miners as the enemy within 254 370 He received an unprecedented standing ovation for his oration which included the words It breaks my heart to see and I cannot interfere what is happening in our country today This terrible strike by the best men in the world who beat the Kaiser s and Hitler s armies and never gave in It is pointless and we cannot afford that kind of thing Then there is the growing division of comparative prosperity in the south and an ailing north and Midlands We used to have battles and rows but they were quarrels Now there is a new kind of wicked hatred that has been brought in by different types of people 251 As Chancellor of Oxford University Macmillan condemned its refusal in February 1985 to award Thatcher an honorary degree He noted that the decision represented a break with tradition and predicted that the snub would rebound on the university 256 Macmillan is widely supposed to have likened Thatcher s policy of privatisation to selling the family silver His precise quote at a dinner of the Tory Reform Group at the Royal Overseas League on 8 November 1985 was on the subject of the sale of assets commonplace among individuals or states when they encountered financial difficulties First of all the Georgian silver goes And then all that nice furniture that used to be in the salon Then the Canalettos go Profitable parts of the steel industry and the railways had been privatised along with British Telecom They were like two Rembrandts still left 257 Macmillan s speech was much commented on and a few days later he made a speech in the House of Lords referring to it When I ventured the other day to criticise the system I was I am afraid misunderstood As a Conservative I am naturally in favour of returning into private ownership and private management all those means of production and distribution which are now controlled by state capitalism I am sure they will be more efficient What I ventured to question was the using of these huge sums as if they were income 258 Death and funeral edit nbsp The Macmillan family graves in 2012 at St Giles Church Horsted Keynes Macmillan s grave is on the right Macmillan had often play acted being an old man long before real old age set in As early as 1948 Humphry Berkeley wrote of how he makes a show of being feeble and decrepit mentioning how he had suddenly stopped shambling and sprinted for a train Nigel Fisher tells an anecdote of how Macmillan initially greeted him to his house leaning on a stick but later walked and climbed steps perfectly well twice acting lame again and fetching his stick when he remembered his act However in genuine old age he became almost blind causing him to need sticks and a helping arm 259 On the evening of 29 December 1986 Macmillan died at Birch Grove the Macmillan family mansion on the edge of Ashdown Forest in Horsted Keynes West Sussex 260 261 His grandson and heir Alexander Viscount Macmillan of Ovenden said In the last 48 hours he was very weak but entirely reasonable and intelligent His last words were I think I will go to sleep now 262 263 His lifespan of 92 years and 322 days was the longest of any British prime minister until surpassed by Lord Callaghan on 14 February 2005 264 Paying tribute Thatcher hailed Macmillan as a very remarkable man and a very great patriot and said that his dislike of selling the family silver had never come between them He was unique in the affection of the British people 265 Additional tributes came from around the world US President Ronald Reagan said The American people share in the loss of a voice of wisdom and humanity who with eloquence and gentle wit brought to the problems of today the experience of a long life of public service 237 Outlawed African National Congress president Oliver Tambo sent his condolences As South Africans we shall always remember him for his efforts to encourage the apartheid regime to bow to the winds of change that continue to blow in South Africa 237 Commonwealth Secretary General Sir Shridath Ramphal affirmed His own leadership in providing from Britain a worthy response to African national consciousness shaped the post war era and made the modern Commonwealth possible 237 nbsp Memorial tablet in St Giles Church Horsted KeynesA private funeral was held on 5 January 1987 at St Giles Church Horsted Keynes West Sussex where he had regularly worshipped and read the lesson 266 Two hundred mourners attended 263 including 64 members of the Macmillan family Thatcher and former premiers Lord Home and Edward Heath as well as Lord Hailsham 262 and scores of country neighbours 266 The Prince of Wales sent a wreath in admiring memory 262 He was buried beside his wife and next to his parents and his son Maurice who had died in 1984 266 The House of Commons paid its tribute on 12 January 1987 with much reference made to his book The Middle Way 267 Thatcher said In his retirement Harold Macmillan occupied a unique place in the nation s affections while Labour leader Neil Kinnock struck a more critical note Death and distance cannot lend sufficient enchantment to alter the view that the period over which he presided in the 1950s while certainly and thankfully a period of rising affluence and confidence was also a time of opportunities missed of changes avoided Harold Macmillan was of course not solely or even pre eminently responsible for that But we cannot but record with frustration the fact that the vigorous and perceptive attacker of the status quo in the 1930s became its emblem for a time in the late 1950s before returning to be its critic in the 1980s 267 A public memorial service attended by the Queen and thousands of mourners was held on 10 February 1987 in Westminster Abbey 268 Macmillan s estate was assessed for probate on 1 June 1987 with a value of 51 114 equivalent to 152 955 in 2021 269 270 Honours awards and legacy editMacmillan was an elected Fellow of the Royal Society FRS in 1962 271 In 1976 he received the Order of Merit In 1984 he received the Freedom medal from the Roosevelt Study Center Macmillan s archives are located at Oxford University s Bodleian Library 272 273 Macmillan was awarded a number of honorary degrees including 1956 Indiana University 274 1958 DePauw University 275 1958 Johns Hopkins University together with Eisenhower 276 1961 Cambridge University 277 Historians assessments of Macmillan s premiership edit C P Snow wrote to Macmillan that his reputation would endure as like Churchill he was psychologically interesting 278 An early biographer George Hutchinson called him The Last Edwardian at Number Ten 1980 mistakenly in the view of Nigel Fisher 279 Fisher described him as complex almost chameleon 280 At times he portrayed himself as the descendant of a Scottish crofter as a businessman aristocrat intellectual and soldier Labour leader Harold Wilson wrote that his role as a poseur was itself a pose 281 Wilson also argued that behind the public nonchalance lay a real professional 279 Fisher also wrote that he had a talent for pursuing progressive policies but presenting them tactfully in a Conservative tone of voice 282 Historian John Vincent explores the image Macmillan crafted of himself for his colleagues and constituents He presented himself as a patrician as the last Edwardian as a Whig in the tradition of his wife s family as a romantic Tory as intellectual as a man shaped by the comradeship of the trenches and by the slump of the 1930s as a shrewd man of business of bourgeois Scottish stock and as a venerable elder statesman at home with modern youth There was something in all these views which he did little to discourage and which commanded public respect into the early 1960s Whether he was ever a mainstream Conservative rather than a skilful exponent of the postwar consensus is more doubtful 283 Alistair Horne his official biographer concedes that after his re election in 1959 Macmillan s premiership suffered a series of major setbacks 284 Campbell writes that a late developer who languished on the back benches in the 1930s Macmillan seized his opportunity when it came with flair and ruthlessness and until about 1962 filled the highest office with compelling style However he argues that Macmillan is remembered as having been a rather seedy conjuror famous for Premium Bonds Beeching s cuts to the railways and the Profumo Scandal He is also remembered for stop go economics first expansion despite the opposition of Thorneycroft and his team then Selwyn Lloyd s Pay Pause and then finally the Maudling boom with Britain s relative economic decline especially compared to the countries of the EC becoming clear despite perceptions of consumer affluence in the late 1950s In the 1980s the aged Macmillan was seen as a revered but slightly pathetic figure 285 Dominic Sandbrook writes that Macmillan s final weeks were typical of his premiership devious theatrical and self seeking although not without droll wit and intelligence Macmillan is best remembered for the affluent society which he inherited rather than created in the late 1950s but chancellors came and went and by the early 1960s economic policy was nothing short of a shambles while his achievements in foreign policy made little difference to the lives of the public By the time he left office largely unlamented at the time he was associated not with prosperity but with anachronism and decay citation needed D R Thorpe writes that by the early 1960s Macmillan was seen as the epitome of all that was wrong with anachronistic Britain This was an unfair charge The essence of his persona was as elusive as mercury He was not a member of the Establishment in fact he was a businessman who had married into the aristocracy and a rebel Chancellor of Oxford He had style in abundance and was a star on the world stage Thorpe argues that despite his 1960 Winds of Change speech he was largely pushed into rapid independence for African countries by Maudling and Macleod 286 Richard Lamb argues that Macmillan was by far the best of Britain s postwar Prime Ministers and his administration performed better than any of their successors Lamb argues that it is unfair to blame Macmillan for excessively quick African independence resulting in many former colonies becoming dictatorships or for the Beeching Plan which was accepted by Labour in 1964 although Macmillan himself had reservations and had asked civil servants to draw up plans for extra road building and argues that had he remained in power Macmillan would never have allowed inflation to get as far out of hand as it did in the 1970s 5 vteEarls of StocktonDaniel MacMillan 1813 1857 Maurice Crawford Macmillan 1853 1936 Earl of Stockton and Viscount Macmillan of Ovenden 1984 Maurice Harold Macmillan 1894 1986 1st Earl of StocktonMaurice Victor Macmillan 1921 1984 styled Viscount Macmillan of OvendenAlexander Daniel Alan Macmillan b 1943 2nd Earl of Stockton 2nd Viscount Macmillan of OvendenAdam Julian Robert Macmillan 1948 2016 David Maurice Benjamin Macmillan b 1957 Daniel Maurice Alan Macmillan b 1974 styled Viscount Macmillan of OvendenFrederick Maurice Brian Macmillan b 1990 Joshua Gabriel P Macmillan b 1995 Finn Joshua Marcus Macmillan b 1995 Heir apparent to the Earldom of StocktonCabinets 1957 1963 editJanuary 1957 October 1959 edit Harold Macmillan Prime Minister Lord Kilmuir Lord Chancellor Lord Salisbury Lord President of the Council Rab Butler Lord Privy Seal and Secretary of State for the Home Department Peter Thorneycroft Chancellor of the Exchequer Selwyn Lloyd Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Alan Lennox Boyd Secretary of State for the Colonies Lord Home Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations Sir David Eccles President of the Board of Trade Charles Hill Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Lord Hailsham Minister of Education John Scott Maclay Secretary of State for Scotland Derick Heathcoat Amory Minister of Agriculture Iain Macleod Minister of Labour and National Service Harold Arthur Watkinson Minister of Transport and Civil Aviation Duncan Edwin Sandys Minister of Defence Lord Mills Minister of Power Henry Brooke Minister of Housing and Local Government and Welsh AffairsChange March 1957 Lord Home succeeds Lord Salisbury as Lord President remaining Commonwealth Relations Secretary September 1957 Lord Hailsham succeeds Lord Home as Lord President Home remaining Commonwealth Relations Secretary Geoffrey Lloyd succeeds Hailsham as Minister of Education The Chief Secretary to the Treasury Reginald Maudling enters the Cabinet January 1958 Derick Heathcoat Amory succeeds Peter Thorneycroft as Chancellor of the Exchequer John Hare succeeds Amory as Minister of Agriculture October 1959 July 1960 edit Harold Macmillan Prime Minister Lord Kilmuir Lord Chancellor Lord Home Lord President of the Council and Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations Lord Hailsham Lord Privy Seal and Minister of Science Derick Heathcoat Amory Chancellor of the Exchequer Rab Butler Secretary of State for the Home Department Selwyn Lloyd Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Iain Macleod Secretary of State for the Colonies Reginald Maudling President of the Board of Trade Charles Hill Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Sir David Eccles Minister of Education Lord Mills Chief Secretary to the Treasury Ernest Marples Minister of Transport Duncan Edwin Sandys Minister of Aviation Harold Arthur Watkinson Minister of Defence John Scott Maclay Secretary of State for Scotland Edward Heath Minister of Labour and National Service John Hare Minister of Agriculture Henry Brooke Minister of Housing and Local Government and Welsh AffairsJuly 1960 October 1961 edit Harold Macmillan Prime Minister Lord Kilmuir Lord Chancellor Lord Hailsham Lord President of the Council and Minister of Science Edward Heath Lord Privy Seal Selwyn Lloyd Chancellor of the Exchequer Rab Butler Secretary of State for the Home Department Lord Home Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Iain Macleod Secretary of State for the Colonies Duncan Edwin Sandys Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations Reginald Maudling President of the Board of Trade Charles Hill Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Sir David Eccles Minister of Education Lord Hailsham Minister of Science Lord Mills Chief Secretary to the Treasury Ernest Marples Minister of Transport Peter Thorneycroft Minister of Aviation Harold Arthur Watkinson Minister of Defence John Scott Maclay Secretary of State for Scotland John Hare Minister of Labour and National Service Christopher Soames Minister of Agriculture Henry Brooke Minister of Housing and Local Government and Welsh AffairsOctober 1961 July 1962 edit Harold Macmillan Prime Minister Lord Kilmuir Lord Chancellor Lord Hailsham Lord President of the Council and Minister of Science Edward Heath Lord Privy Seal Selwyn Lloyd Chancellor of the Exchequer Rab Butler Secretary of State for the Home Department Lord Home Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Reginald Maudling Secretary of State for the Colonies Duncan Edwin Sandys Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations Frederick Erroll President of the Board of Trade Iain Macleod Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Sir David Eccles Minister of Education Henry Brooke Chief Secretary to the Treasury Ernest Marples Minister of Transport Peter Thorneycroft Minister of Aviation Harold Arthur Watkinson Minister of Defence John Scott Maclay Secretary of State for Scotland John Hare Minister of Labour and National Service Christopher Soames Minister of Agriculture Charles Hill Minister of Housing and Local Government and Welsh Affairs Lord Mills Minister without PortfolioJuly 1962 October 1963 edit Note In a radical reshuffle dubbed The Night of the Long Knives Macmillan sacked a third of his Cabinet Harold Macmillan Prime Minister Rab Butler Deputy Prime Minister and First Secretary of State Lord Dilhorne Lord Chancellor Lord Hailsham Lord President of the Council and Minister of Science Edward Heath Lord Privy Seal Reginald Maudling Chancellor of the Exchequer Henry Brooke Secretary of State for the Home Department Lord Home Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Duncan Edwin Sandys Secretary of State for the Colonies and Secretary of State for Commonwealth Relations Frederick Erroll President of the Board of Trade Iain Macleod Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Sir Edward Boyle Minister of Education John Boyd Carpenter Chief Secretary to the Treasury Ernest Marples Minister of Transport Julian Amery Minister of Aviation Peter Thorneycroft Minister of Defence Michael Noble Secretary of State for Scotland John Hare Minister of Labour and National Service Christopher Soames Minister of Agriculture Sir Keith Joseph Minister of Housing and Local Government and Welsh Affairs Enoch Powell Minister of Health William Deedes Minister without PortfolioCultural depictions editFurther information Cultural depictions of Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom Harold MacmillanNotes edit RB 1963a p 1 RB 1963a p 2 It is of course the responsibility of the British Railways Board so to shape and operate the railways as to make them pay References edit Harold Macmillan Dies at 92 The New York Times 30 December 1986 Archived from the original on 29 June 2021 Retrieved 8 March 2021 Middleton 1997 pp 422 23 Middleton 1997 p 422 Peter Hennessy Having It So Good Britain in the Fifties London Allen Lane 2006 pp 533 34 a b Lamb 1995 pp 14 15 Leitch David 8 December 1996 The spy who rocked a world of privilege The Independent London archived from the original on 4 August 2012 Fisher 1982 p 2 Horne 2008 p 9 Campbell 2010 p 245 Winds of Change speech minute 29 04 PM Harold Macmillan Wind of Change Speech at the Cape Town Parliament 3 February 1960 YouTube Archived from the original on 24 November 2017 Retrieved 4 December 2017 Horne 2008 p 13 Williams 2010 p 15 Mr T S Morton The Times 23 January 1962 a b Horne 1988 p 15 Horne 2008 p 16 Simon Ball The Guardsmen Harold Macmillan Three Friends and the World They Made London Harper Collins 2004 p 19 Williams 2010 pp 19 26 a b c d e Thorpe 2010 Horne 1988 p 22 Thorpe 2010 p 41 Supermac Thorpe 2011 pp 47 48 No 28979 The London Gazette Supplement 17 November 1914 p 9505 No 29500 The London Gazette Supplement 7 March 1916 p 2533 No 29376 The London Gazette Supplement 19 November 1915 p 11582 MacMillan 2010 p 89 Lawton John 1992 1963 Five Hundred Days Sevenoaks UK Hodder and Stoughton ISBN 0 340 50846 9 Ball Guardsmen p 64 Thorpe 2010 p 58 Harold Macmillan Archived from the original on 21 March 2015 Retrieved 13 June 2015 Spartacus Educational website biography Campbell 2010 p 246 247 Williams 2010 p 31 Horne 2008 p 49 Thorpe 2010 pp 42 45 sent down is a university term for expelled Williams 2010 p 49 Thorpe 2010 p 62 Macmillan 1966 pp 107 108 This period saw disturbances amongst British troops in France which was of grave worry to the Government as the Russian and German revolutions had been accompanied by army mutinies In the end the crisis was resolved by giving priority for demobilisation to men who had served the longest Horne 2008 p 52 Williams 2010 p 55 No 31958 The London Gazette Supplement 29 June 1920 p 7073 The London Gazette states that he held and retained the rank of lieutenant Thorpe 2010 pp 72 76 77 88 109 118 Horne 1989 p 155 Bloch Michael 2015 Closet Queens Little Brown p 213 ISBN 978 1408704127 Leonard Dick 2005 Harold Macmillan Idealist into Manipulator In A Century of Premiers Palgrave Macmillan p 210 ISBN 978 1 4039 3990 6 Thorpe 2010 pp 94 100 Thorpe 2010 p 95 Thorpe points out that divorce still caused muttering as late as the 1950s Walter Monckton s divorce may have cost him promotion to the highest legal positions of Lord Chief Justice and Lord Chancellor while Anthony Eden faced criticism for divorcing and remarrying and talk that he was unfit to make ecclesiastical appointments Parris Matthew 1997 Great Parliamentary Scandals Four Centuries of Calumny Smear amp Innuendo London Robson Books pp 98 104 ISBN 1 86105 152 2 Horne 1988 p 67 Campbell 2010 p 248 Thorpe 2010 14116 14121 Richard Allen Cave O Casey Sean 1880 1964 Archived 8 November 2021 at the Wayback Machine Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edition January 2008 Retrieved 19 November 2011 Garry O Connor Obituary Eileen O Casey The Guardian 12 April 1995 p 13 Edward Marriott Obituary Eileen O Casey Evening Standard London 18 April 1995 Eileen O Casey Obituary The Times 11 April 1995 p 19 Horne 1988 p 69 a b c Campbell 2010 p 246 a b Fisher 1982 pp 32 33 a b Horne 1988 p 243 a b c Horne 1988 p 103 Horne 1988 p 100 Betts Lewis David 3 April 2018 Harold Macmillan and appeasement implications for the future study of Macmillan as a foreign policy actor Contemporary British History 32 2 169 189 doi 10 1080 13619462 2017 1401475 ISSN 1361 9462 S2CID 148757056 Campbell 2010 p 249 Seidman Michael Transatlantic Antifascisms From the Spanish Civil War to the End of World War II Cambridge University Press 2017 p 89 Horne 1988 pp 117 118 Horne 1988 p 119 Horne 1988 pp 134 135 Horne 1988 p 139 Campbell 2010 p 252 Fisher 1982 pp 78 79 Harold Macmillan The Blast of War 1939 45 London Macmillan 1967 p 161 Fisher 1982 p 82 a b Campbell 2010 p 254 a b Horne 1988 pp 151 160 Horne 2008 p 158 Horne 1988 p 160 a b Ashton 2005 p 697 Horne 1988 p 170 Ashton 2005 pp 697 698 https twitter com thehistoryguy status 1628503689890496512 Twitter a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help Horne 1988 p 174 Horne 1988 pp 195 199 Horne 1988 p 201 Horne 1988 p 210 Horne 1988 pp 218 222 Horne 1988 pp 230 240 Horne 2008 pp 251 86 Sir Curtis Keeble Macmillan and the Soviet Union in Richard Aldous and Sabine Lee eds Harold Macmillan Aspects of a Political Life London Macmillan 1999 pp 199 200 Ferdinand Mount 8 September 2011 Too Obviously Cleverer London Review of Books 33 17 Archived from the original on 21 January 2012 Retrieved 15 January 2012 Thorpe 2010 pp 234 35 Macmillan Tides of Fortune p 29 Harold Macmillan Tides of Fortune London Macmillan 1969 pp 28 29 Harold Nicolson Diaries and Letters 1945 62 London Phoenix p 32 Campbell 2010 pp 255 256 Campbell 2010 pp 256 257 Macmillan Tides of Fortune p 364 Campbell 2010 pp 257 258 Campbell 2010 p 259 Fisher 1982 p 139 The Housing Total Was 318 779 Hartlepool Northern Daily Mail 5 February 1954 Retrieved 8 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Fisher 1982 p 143 The Economist 16 April 1955 Fisher 1982 pp 144 145 Fisher 1982 p 145 Horne 1988 pp 353 354 Horne 1988 p 155 Horne 1989 pp 244 245 Campbell 2010 pp 249 254 Horne 1989 p 122 a b Fisher 1982 p 150 Edmund Dell The Chancellors A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer 1945 90 1997 pp 207 222 covers his term as Chancellor Campbell 2010 pp 261 262 264 Campbell 2010 pp 264 265 18 April 1956 Macmillan unveils premium bond scheme Archived 6 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine BBC News On This Day 1950 2005 Horne 2008 p 383 John Major 1999 John Major The Autobiography HarperCollins p 26 Harold Macmillan Unflappable master of the middle way Archived 19 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine obituary in The Guardian by Vernon Bogdanor 30 December 1986 Horne 2008 p 441 Bertjan Verbeek Decision making in Great Britain during the Suez crisis 2003 p 95 Campbell 2010 p 265 Beckett 2006 p 74 Toye Richard Churchill s Empire The World That Made Him and the World He Made 2010 p 304 Beckett 2006 pp 73 74 a b Diane B Kunz The Economic Diplomacy of the Suez Crisis 1991 pp 130 40 Howard 1987 p 237 Williams 2010 p 267 Thorpe 2010 p 356 Howard 1987 p 239 Howard 1987 p 242 Thorpe 2010 pp 352 53 Eisenhower said these words in a meeting with Treasury Secretary Humphrey who was pro Butler Under Secretary of State Hoover and Staff Secretary Andrew Goodpaster It is unclear whether there was direct pressure from the US Administration for Macmillan to be chosen or rather whether being the candidate best placed to rebuild bridges with the Americans was simply another reason why leading Conservatives preferred him to Butler Published accounts do not agree about the date of the meeting Williams 2010 p 270 lists it as happening on 20 November a date repeated in Michael Jago s 2015 biography of Rab Butler Macmillan s other recent biographer D R Thorpe gives it as 24 December presumably an error as the footnote refers to Eisenhower s papers for November 1956 while in his biography of Anthony Eden 2003 p 539 Thorpe gives it as 24 November Howard 1987 pp 240 241 Thorpe 2010 pp 353 354 Campbell 2010 p 269 Howard 1987 p 244 Thorpe 2010 p 358 Beckett 2006 pp 77 78 Thorpe 2010 pp 361 362 Harold Macmillan The Macmillan Diaries The Cabinet Years 1950 1957 ed Peter Catterall London Macmillan 2003 a b Horne 1989 pp 5 13 David Butler Twentieth Century British Political Facts 1900 2000 Macmillan 8th edition 2000 Gyles Brandreth Brief encounters meetings with remarkable people 2001 p 214 a b c Goodlad amp Pearce 2013 p 169 a b c d e f g h Goodlad amp Pearce 2013 p 170 Colin Seymour Ure Prime Ministers and the Media issues of power and control 2003 p 261 Edmund Dell The Chancellors A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer 1945 90 1997 pp 223 303 a b Thorpe 2010 pp 401 407 Thorpe 2010 p 407 David Kynaston Till Time s Last Stand A History of The Bank of England 1694 2013 Bloomsbury Publishing 2017 pp 434 435 OCR A Level History B The End of Consensus Britain 1945 90 by Pearson Education Davey Smith George Dorling Daniel Shaw Mary 11 July 2001 Poverty Inequality and Health in Britain 1800 2000 A Reader Policy Press ISBN 9781861342119 Archived from the original on 8 November 2021 Retrieved 18 October 2013 Micklitz H W 1 November 2011 The Many Concepts of Social Justice in European Private Law Edward Elgar ISBN 9780857935892 Retrieved 18 October 2013 Spicker Paul 2011 How Social Security Works An Introduction to Benefits in Britain Policy Press ISBN 9781847428103 Archived from the original on 8 November 2021 Retrieved 18 October 2013 Mastering Modern World History by Norman Lowe Fisher 1982 p 214 Fisher 1982 p 193 Horne Macmillan Volume II pp 94 95 Horne Macmillan Volume II p 419 Onslow Sue 13 July 2015 The Commonwealth and the Cold War Neutralism and Non Alignment The International History Review 37 5 1059 1082 doi 10 1080 07075332 2015 1053965 S2CID 154044321 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Nick Rufford A bomb links kept secret from Queen Sunday Times 3 January 1988 Windscale Britain s Biggest Nuclear Disaster broadcast on Monday 8 October 2007 at 2100 BST on BBC Two Paddy Shennan Britain s Biggest Nuclear Disaster Liverpool Echo 13 October 2007 p 26 John Hunt Cabinet Papers For 1957 Windscale Fire Danger Disclosed Financial Times 2 January 1988 David Walker Focus on 1957 Macmillan ordered Windscale censorship The Times 1 January 1988 Jean McSorley Contaminated evidence The secrecy and political cover ups that followed the fire in a British nuclear reactor 50 years ago still resonate in public concerns The Guardian 10 October 2007 p 8 John Gray Accident disclosures bring calls for review of U K secrecy laws Globe and Mail Toronto 4 January 1988 Richard Gott The Evolution of the Independent British Deterrent International Affairs 39 2 April 1963 p 246 Gott Independent British Deterrent p 247 The Times 4 July US Navy Ashton 2005 p 699 Ashton 2005 pp 699 700 Ashton 2005 p 700 Ashton 2005 p 702 Ashton 2005 p 703 Harold Macmillan Speech in Bedford 20 July 1957 BBC News 20 July 1974 archived from the original on 3 October 2010 retrieved 31 January 2010 Lamb 1995 p 62 1959 Macmillan wins Tory hat trick 5 April 2005 Archived from the original on 22 April 2009 via news bbc co uk a b Cabinet Papers Strained consensus and Labour Nationalarchives gov uk Archived from the original on 10 October 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Thorpe 2010 p 518 Thorpe 2010 p 520 Thorpe 2010 p 524 Thorpe 2010 p 525 Garry Keenor The Reshaping of British Railways Part 1 Report The Railways Archive Archived from the original on 19 October 2010 Retrieved 25 July 2010 Campbell 2010 p 275 Ashton 2005 pp 703 704 a b Ashton 2005 p 704 a b Ashton 2005 p 705 a b Ashton 2005 p 707 Ashton 2005 pp 708 709 a b Ashton 2005 p 709 a b Busch 2003 p 20 Ashton 2005 pp 709 710 Busch 2003 p 22 Busch 2003 p 22 23 Ashton 2005 p 710 Ashton 2005 p 712 Christopher Sandford Harold and Jack The Remarkable Friendship of Prime Minister Macmillan and President Kennedy 2014 pp 212 213 a b c d Ashton 2005 p 719 a b Ashton 2005 p 713 a b Ashton 2005 p 714 a b Wright 1999 p 10 Larry Butler and Sarah Stockwell eds The wind of change Harold Macmillan and British decolonization Springer 2013 a b c d e Goodlad amp Pearce 2013 p 176 Toye Richard Churchill s Empire The World That Made Him and the World He Made 2010 p 306 Harold Macmillan begins his winds of change tour of Africa South Africa History Online Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 a b c Subritzy 1999 p 181 Subritzy 1999 p 180 a b c Busch 2003 p 174 Subritzy 1999 p 187 190 Busch 2003 p 176 a b c Subritzy 1999 p 190 Subritzy 1999 p 189 Busch 2003 p 182 183 Subritzy 1999 p 189 190 Fisher 1982 p 230 a b c d e Goodlad amp Pearce 2013 p 178 George Wilkes Britain s failure to enter the European community 1961 63 the enlargement negotiations and crises in European Atlantic and Commonwealth relations 1997 1 Archived 26 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine p 63 online Lamb 1995 pp 164 65 Chapters 14 and 15 a b Thorpe 2010 pp 551 552 Thorpe 2010 pp 504 05 a b Goodlad amp Pearce 2013 p 179 Thorpe 2010 p 613 1963 Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell dies BBC News 21 October 1963 Archived from the original on 15 July 2015 1963 a year to remember BBC Democracy Live 28 March 2013 Archived from the original on 26 April 2016 a b Goodlad amp Pearce 2013 p 180 SECURITY MR PROFUMO S RESIGNATION Hansard 17 June 1963 SECURITY MR PROFUMO S RESIGNATION Parliamentary Debates Hansard 17 June 1963 Archived from the original on 7 May 2016 Lamb 1995 p 488 Campbell 2010 p 284 285 Thorpe 2010 pp 558 559 Thorpe 2010 p 565 Lamb 1995 p 491 a b Thorpe 2010 pp 566 567 Thorpe 2010 pp 569 570 Pimlott Ben 1997 The Queen A Biography of Elizabeth II New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc p 335 ISBN 047119431X the soundings and the accompanying political intrigues are discussed in detail in Rab Butler s biography Anthony Bevins How Supermac Was Hounded Out of Office by Band of 20 Opponents The Observer 1 January 1995 p 1 News 15 October 1964 BBC News Archived from the original on 23 February 2012 a b c d Fletcher Martin 31 December 1986 World pays tribute to Stockton Death of former Conservative premier The Times Thorpe 2010 p 587 Richard Vinen Thatcher s Britain The Politics and Social Upheaval of the 1980s Simon amp Schuster London 2009 p 316 Howard 1987 p 353 Campbell 2010 p 266 Thorpe 2010 p 605 The Wit and Wisdom Inside No 10 Daily Express 27 March 2008 p 13 No 46872 The London Gazette 9 September 1976 p 5299 a b Fisher 1982 pp 359 360 Fisher 1982 p 355 1975 Tories choose first woman leader BBC News British Broadcasting Corporation 11 February 1975 Archived from the original on 7 March 2008 1979 Election victory for Margaret Thatcher BBC News British Broadcasting Corporation 4 May 1979 Archived from the original on 19 December 2007 Fisher 1982 p 362 a b Vinen Richard 2009 Thatcher s Britain the Politics and Social Upheaval of the Thatcher Era London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9781847371751 a b Apple R W Jr 14 November 1984 Macmillan at 90 Rouses the Lords The New York Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2017 Thorpe 2010 p 663 Moore 2013 pp 679 680 a b Thatcher Margaret 1993 The Downing Street Years London HarperCollins ISBN 0002550490 No 49660 The London Gazette 29 February 1984 p 2951 Lord Stockton has condemned Oxford University s decision not to give Mrs Thatcher an honorary degree The Guardian p 28 4 February 1985 Watkins Alan 1992 A Conservative Coup the fall of Margaret Thatcher 2nd ed London Duckworth p 105 ISBN 0715624350 The Earl of Stockton 14 November 1985 New Technologies Parliamentary Debates Hansard Vol 468 House of Lords col 390 391 Fisher 1982 pp 361 362 Fox Thomas 2 April 2022 Birch Grove The West Sussex country house once owned by a Prime Minister where JFK stayed the night Sussex Live Total Sense Media Retrieved 24 November 2023 Bates Stephen 30 December 1986 Supermac Is Dead at 92 The Daily Telegraph p 1 Retrieved 5 December 2023 via Newspapers com a b c Foster Howard 6 January 1987 I think I will go to sleep now Funeral of former premier Harold Macmillan The Times p 23 a b British leaders mourn Harold Macmillan Toronto Star p A10 6 January 1987 Morgan Kenneth 14 February 2005 Big Jim was no one s fool The Guardian Retrieved 5 December 2023 Fletcher Martin 31 December 1986 World pays tribute to Stockton Death of former Conservative premier The Times a b c Macmillan Funeral Held Thatcher Attends Services San Francisco Chronicle p 23 6 January 1987 a b Johnson Frank 13 January 1987 Tributes to the master of timing The Times Memorial service for Harold Macmillan First Earl of Stockton O M P C Tuesday 10 February 1987 12 noon London Westminster Abbey 1987 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Stockton Maurice Harold Macmillan 1st Earl of probatesearchservice gov UK Government 1987 Archived from the original on 8 November 2021 Retrieved 7 April 2020 Lord Hailsham Of St Marylebone 1987 Maurice Harold Macmillan First Earl of Stockton 10 February 1894 29 December 1986 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 33 376 385 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1987 0014 JSTOR 769957 Macmillan Papers Bodley ox ac uk Archived from the original on 5 December 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Catalogue of the papers of Harold Macmillan 1889 1987 now online 14 February 2014 Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Honoree Search Awards University Honors amp Awards Indiana University Honorsandawards iu edu Archived from the original on 2 August 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Britain s Harold Macmillan to Meet with President Eisenhower the Day After Visiting DePauw DePauw University Depauw edu Archived from the original on 21 August 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Macmillan amp Eisenhower British Pathe Uk news yahoo com Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Getty Images Itnsource com Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Retrieved 21 October 2017 Thorpe 2010 p 619 a b Fisher 1982 p 369 Fisher 1982 p 364 Fisher 1982 p 365 Fisher 1982 p 367 John Vincent Macmillan Harold in Fred M Leventhal ed Twentieth century Britain an encyclopedia Garland 1995 p 488 Horne 1989 p 214 Campbell 2010 p 292 Thorpe 2010 pp 614 17 Cited texts editAshton Nigel J August 2005 Harold Macmillan and the Golden Days of Anglo American Relations Revisited 1957 63 PDF Diplomatic History 29 4 691 723 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 2005 00511 x Beckett Francis 2006 Macmillan London Haus Publishing ISBN 978 1 904950 66 0 Busch Peter 2003 All the Way with JFK Britain the US and the Vietnam War Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199256396 Campbell John 2010 Pistols at Dawn Two Hundred Years of Political Rivalry from Pitt and Fox to Blair and Brown London Vintage ISBN 978 1 845 95091 0 contains an essay on Macmillan and Butler Dell Edmund The Chancellors A History of the Chancellors of the Exchequer 1945 90 HarperCollins 1997 pp 207 222 covers his term as Chancellor Fisher Nigel 1982 Harold Macmillan London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 77914 8 Goodlad Graham Pearce Robert 2013 British Prime Ministers From Balfour to Brown London Routledge ISBN 9780415669832 Horne Alistair 1988 Macmillan Volume I 1894 1956 original ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 27691 4 Horne Alistair 1989 Macmillan Volume II 1957 1986 Original ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 49621 3 Horne Alistair 2008 1988 9 Macmillan The Official Biography Twentieth anniversary ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 71083 2 Howard Anthony 1987 RAB The Life of R A Butler London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0 224 01862 3 Lamb Richard 1995 The Macmillan Years 1957 63 The Emerging Truth London Murray ISBN 978 0 719 55392 9 Middleton Roger 1997 1996 Government Versus the Market Growth of the Public Sector Economic Management and British Economic Performance 1890 1979 New ed Cheltenham Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 978 1 85898 371 4 Moore Charles 2013 Margaret Thatcher From Grantham to the Falklands Sandbrook Dominic 2005 Never Had It So Good London Little Brown ISBN 978 0 349 11530 6 Subritzy John 1999 Macmillan and East of Suez the Case of Malaysia In Lee Richard ed Macmillan Aspects of a Political Life London Macmillan pp 177 194 ISBN 9780230376892 Thorpe D R 2010 Supermac The Life of Harold Macmillan Kindle ed London Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 1 844 13541 7 Theatre Record 1997 for Hugh Whitemore s A Letter of Resignation 2008 for Howard Brenton s Never So Good Williams Charles 2010 Harold Macmillan London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 753 82702 4 Wright Oliver 1999 Macmillan A View from the Foreign Office In Lee Richard ed Macmillan Aspects of a Political Life London Macmillan pp 6 15 ISBN 9780230376892 Further reading editAldous Richard and Sabine Lee eds Harold Macmillan and Britain s world role Springer 2016 Ball Simon The Guardsmen Harold Macmillan Three Friends and the World They Made Harper Perennial London 2005 ISBN 978 0 00 653163 0 Betts Lewis David Harold Macmillan and appeasement implications for the future study of Macmillan as a foreign policy actor Contemporary British History 32 2 2018 169 189 Butler Larry and Sarah Stockwell eds The Wind of Change Harold Macmillan and British Decolonization Springer 2013 Davenport Hines Richard An English Affair Sex Class and Power in the Age of Profumo HarperCollins London 2013 ISBN 978 0 00 743585 2 Edmonds Anthony O and E Bruce Geelhoed Eisenhower Macmillan and Allied Unity 1957 61 Basingstoke UK Palgrave Macmillan 2003 ISBN 0 333 64227 9 Evans Brendan The oratory of Harold Macmillan in Conservative Orators from Baldwin to Cameron Manchester University Press 2016 Grant Matthew Historians the Penguin Specials and the State of the Nation Literature 1958 64 Contemporary British History 2003 17 3 pp29 54 focus on decline of Britain Hennessy Peter Having It So Good Britain In The Fifties Penguin Books London 2006 ISBN 978 0 14 100409 9 Hodge Alan The Macmillan Years History Today December 1963 13 12 pp 848 851 covers 1931 to 1963 Hughes Emrys Macmillan Portrait of a Politician Allen amp Unwin 1962 ISBN 978 0 04 923013 2 Hutchinson George The Last Edwardian at No 10 An Impression of Harold Macmillan Quartet Books London 1980 ISBN 978 0 7043 2232 5 James Elizabeth Macmillan A Publishing Tradition London 2002 ISBN 0 333 73517 X Merk Dorothea and Rudiger Ahrens Suspicious Federal Chancellor Versus Weak Prime Minister Konrad Adenauer and Harold Macmillan in the British and West German Quality Press during the Berlin Crisis 1958 to 1962 A Critical Discourse Analysis in Europe in Discourse Identity Diversity Borders 2016 pp 101 116 online dead link Ovendale Ritchie Macmillan and the wind of change in Africa 1957 1960 Historical Journal 1995 38 2 pp 455 477 Rooke Patrick J The Wind of Change in Africa 1968 online Sampson Anthony Macmillan A Study in Ambiguity A amp C Black 2012 Sandford Christopher Harold and Jack The Remarkable Friendship of Prime Minister Macmillan and President Kennedy Prometheus Books 2014 Tolstoy Nikolai The Minister and the Massacres London 1986 ISBN 0 09 164010 5 Torreggiani Valerio The Making of Harold Macmillan s Third Way in Interwar Britain 1924 1935 in New Political Ideas in the Aftermath of the Great War Palgrave Macmillan Cham 2017 pp 67 85 Turner John 1994 Macmillan Profiles In Power London Longman ISBN 978 0 582 55386 6 Britannica Online about Harold MacmillanPrimary sources edit Macmillan Harold The Macmillan Diaries vol II Prime Minister and after 1957 1966 Pan 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harold Macmillan nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Harold Macmillan nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Harold Macmillan Annotated Bibliography for Harold Macmillan from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues Archived 4 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Harold Macmillan BBC Harold Macmillan obituary President of the friends of Roquetaillade association 2 8 June 1958 speech on Interdependence at DePauw University More about Harold Macmillan on the Downing Street website 1968 Britain s Harold Macmillan Makes Return Visit to DePauw Calls for New Rapprochement Archived 15 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine RootsAndLeaves com Cavendish family genealogy Bodleian Library Suez Crisis Fiftieth Anniversary Exhibition Portraits of Harold Macmillan 1st Earl of Stockton at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Archival material relating to Harold Macmillan UK National Archives nbsp Newspaper clippings about Harold Macmillan in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byRobert Strother Stewart Member of Parliament for Stockton on Tees1924 1929 Succeeded byFrederick Fox RileyPreceded byFrederick Fox Riley Member of Parliament for Stockton on Tees1931 1945 Succeeded byGeorge ChetwyndPreceded bySir Edward Campbell Member of Parliament for Bromley1945 1964 Succeeded byJohn HuntPolitical officesPreceded byJohn Llewellin Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Supply1940 1942 Succeeded byThe Viscount PortalPreceded byGeorge Hall Under Secretary of State for the Colonies1942 Succeeded byThe Duke of DevonshirePreceded bySir Archibald Sinclair Secretary of State for Air1945 Succeeded byThe Viscount StansgatePreceded byHugh Daltonas Minister of Local Government and Planning Minister of Housing and Local Government1951 1954 Succeeded byDuncan SandysPreceded byThe Earl Alexander of Tunis Minister of Defence1954 1955 Succeeded bySelwyn LloydPreceded bySir Anthony Eden Foreign Secretary1955Preceded byRab Butler Chancellor of the Exchequer1955 1957 Succeeded byPeter ThorneycroftPreceded bySir Anthony Eden Prime Minister of the United Kingdom1957 1963 Succeeded bySir Alec Douglas HomeParty political officesPreceded bySir Anthony Eden Leader of the British Conservative Party1957 1963 Succeeded bySir Alec Douglas HomeDiplomatic postsNew title Minister Resident in Northwest Africa1942 1945 Succeeded byHarold BalfourAcademic officesPreceded byThe Earl of Halifax Chancellor of the University of Oxford1960 1986 Succeeded byRoy JenkinsPeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Earl of StocktonViscount Macmillan of Ovenden1984 1986 Succeeded byAlexander Macmillan Portal nbsp United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harold Macmillan amp oldid 1206841521, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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