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John Maffey, 1st Baron Rugby

John Loader Maffey, 1st Baron Rugby, GCMG, KCB, KCVO, CSI, CIE, (1 July 1877 – 20 April 1969) was a British civil servant and diplomat who was a key figure in Anglo-Irish relations during the Second World War.

The Lord Rugby
1931 photograph
Governor-General of the Sudan
In office
31 October 1926 – 10 January 1934
MonarchGeorge V
Preceded bySir Geoffrey Francis Archer
Succeeded bySir George Stewart Symes
Personal details
Born
John Loader Maffey

(1877-07-01)1 July 1877
Died20 April 1969(1969-04-20) (aged 91)
SpouseDorothy Gladys Huggins
ChildrenAlan Maffey, 2nd Baron Rugby
Hon. Henry Maffey
Penelope, Lady Aitken
EducationRugby School
Christ Church, Oxford
OccupationCivil servant, diplomat

Biography edit

Early life edit

Maffey was the younger son of Thomas Maffey, a commercial traveller of Rugby, Warwickshire, and his wife, Mary Penelope, daughter of John Loader. He was educated at Rugby School and Christ Church, Oxford.

Career edit

He entered the Indian Civil Service in 1899, and notably served as Assistant Secretary to the Chief Commissioner of North-West-Frontier-Province from 1912 to 1916 and then as Private Secretary to the Viceroy of India Lord Chelmsford from 1916 to 1920 and then Chief Commissioner of the North-West Frontier Province from 1921 to 1924. After a disagreement with the British government in 1924, Maffey resigned from the Indian Civil Service. In 1926 he became Governor-General of Sudan, followed in 1933 by his appointment as Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies.

Representative to Ireland edit

 
Portrait by Philip de László, 1923

On 14 September 1939, two weeks after the outbreak of World War II, Maffey arrived in Dublin to discuss the possibility of the United Kingdom appointing a British representative to Ireland.[1] Later, following a discussion at the British War Cabinet, Maffey was sent back to Dublin again with a letter from Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain appealing once again for the appointment of a 'representative'. The United Kingdom would not agree to appoint an ambassador or a minister, because it would imply that Ireland was a foreign country outside the Commonwealth. On the other hand, Ireland would not agree to the appointment of a High Commissioner to Ireland because that would imply that Ireland was in the Commonwealth which the Irish government did not accept.[2] As a compromise, Chamberlain proposed the title "United Kingdom Representative in Éire" but de Valera rejected this, insisting that the word 'in' be replaced with 'to'. And so "United Kingdom Representative to Éire" was agreed upon and Maffey was appointed on 3 October 1939.[3] For de Valera, the change signified Ireland's independence, sovereignty and equality with the United Kingdom.[4]

Chamberlain remarked that the title would "seem to be well suited to an appointment such as this which is essentially an emergency arrangement intended to meet a temporary but urgent situation".[5] After Maffey took up his appointment as "Representative", there were reports that the Irish Republican Army might abduct or kill him.[6]

Maffey held the post throughout the war years and until his retirement in 1949. During the war, he was undoubtedly the most important foreign diplomat resident in Dublin, given the complications of Ireland's neutrality policy. As "United Kingdom Representative to Eire", Maffey quickly established a good working relationship with Éamon de Valera. De Valera was personally in favour of the survival of democracy but did not necessarily trust the British to look after Ireland's best interests. Maffey was vital in mediating between the 'Warlord' Churchill and 'the Chief' de Valera.

When de Valera was replaced by a coalition, headed by John A. Costello, in 1948, Maffey again established a good working relationship with its members, but he was scathing about the clumsy manner in which the declaration of a Republic was handled: "Mr. Costello has handled the business in a slipshod and amateur fashion".

He encouraged John Betjeman, the press attaché, to establish friendly relations with leading and rising figures in the Dublin literary world, such as Patrick Kavanagh; Maffey himself suggested the subject for one of Kavanagh's poems.

In his memorandum, "The Irish Question in 1945",[7] addressed to the Secretary of State for the Dominions, Maffey expressed his view: "To-day, after six years' detachment, Eire is more than ever a foreign country. It is so dominated by the National Catholic Church as to be almost a theocratic State. Gaelic is enforced in order to show that Eire is not one of the English-speaking nations; foreign games are frowned upon, the war censorship has been misapplied for anti-British purposes, anti-British feeling is fostered in school and by Church and State by a system of hereditary enemy indoctrination. There is probably more widespread anti-British sentiment in Eire to-day than ever before." Commenting on a recent attack by Churchill on de Valera, Maffey reported "Nothing helped Mr. de Valera more than Mr. Churchill's personal attack.... The Irish are a very distinct race, and their marked characteristics persist strongly.... There still persist the dark Milesian strain, the tribal vendetta spirit, hatred and blarney, religious fanaticism, swift alternations between cruelty and laughter. A knowledge of the North-West Frontier tribes of India is a good introduction to an understanding of the Irish. They are both very remarkable and in many ways attractive people, with the same mental kinks. We were wise enough not to attempt to bring the Afridis under our direct rule." He continued "Mr. de Valera is not himself a hater of England, as Mr. Frank Aiken, the Finance Minister, is.... There is very little of the Irishman in Mr. de Valera. He is trusted because of his austerity and his cold mathematical approach to Anglo-Irish problems. He understands the narrowness of the Irish mind and does not venture on to broader paths, though he might certainly have led his people out of spiritual bondage in 1941, when America came into the war."

Maffey felt that "we can now talk to Eire on a cold, factual, horse-trading basis, knowing perfectly well that the cards are in our hands." He continued, "It must be admitted that, by ascribing Dominion status to Eire, we placed in unfriendly hands a power to weaken the conception and responsibilities of Dominion status. Eire has none of the attributes of a Dominion. She is a "Scotland " gone wrong, and we cannot afford to let her be completely divorced from the strategic and economic zone of England, Scotland and Wales." Turning to Northern Ireland, Maffey remarked, "Unhappily it is not possible for us to feel satisfied with the state of affairs in Northern Ireland. The Unionist Government are fighting an insidious enemy who is gaining upon them. Their ballot box is not safe over a period against the Catholic birth rate. The loyalty of the local garrison is not proof against the attractions of a lower income-tax rate in Eire. They are vulnerable to world criticism. The British Government cannot afford to ignore the pronouncement made in November 1944 by the Catholic Archbishop of Westminster, the Most Rev. Dr. Griffin, that there is religious persecution at the present day in Northern Ireland."

In February 1947, Maffey was raised to the peerage as Baron Rugby, of Rugby in the County of Warwick.

His portrait hangs in the National Portrait Gallery of the United Kingdom. Painted by Philip de László in 1923, it was the study for two official portraits, at Government House, Peshawar, and Christ Church, Oxford.[8]

Family edit

Lord Rugby married Dorothy Gladys Huggins, daughter of Charles Lang Huggins, on 28 August 1907. They became the parents of three children: Alan, Henry, and Penelope.

Their only daughter, Penelope, married the war hero and Tory MP Sir William Aitken and became a well-known socialite. She was the mother of the former Conservative politician Jonathan Aitken and the actress Maria Aitken. Her grandchildren are the actor Jack Davenport, the artiste and environmentalist Alexandra Aitken (also known as Uttrang Kaur Khalsa), Victoria Aitken, and William Aitken.

Lord Rugby died in April 1969, aged 91. He was succeeded in the barony by his eldest son Alan Loader Maffey, 2nd Baron Rugby.

Popular culture edit

Maffey was played by Peter Copley in the 1983 RTÉ drama series Caught in a Free State.

He is a minor character in the 2010 novel Long Time Coming by Robert Goddard.

Arms edit

Coat of arms of John Maffey, 1st Baron Rugby
 
 
Crest
A gauntlet fessewise grasping a lantern Proper.
Escutcheon
Ermine a fort with two towers Proper issuant from the base a pile reversed Sable a chief dancettée Or surmounted by a pile Azure charged with an increscent Argent.
Supporters
On either side an Afghan hound Proper gorged with a collar the chain reflexed over the back Or.
Motto
Pass Friend [9]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 'De Valera Rule 1932–75' by David McCullagh, Gill Books 2018 pg. 172
  2. ^ 'De Valera Rule 1932–75' by David McCullagh, Gill Books 2018, pg. 173
  3. ^ 'The Geopolitics of Anglo Irish Relations in the 20th Century'; GR Sloan; Leicester University Press 1997
  4. ^ 'De Valera Rule 1932–75' by David McCullagh, Gill Books 2018, pg. 174
  5. ^ No. 29 UCDA P150/2548 (Documents in Irish Foreign Policy)
  6. ^ No. 114 NAI DFA 2006/39 Confidential report from John W. Dulanty to Joseph P. Walshe (Dublin) (No. 6) (Secret) (Copy) London, 26 January 1940 (Documents in Irish Foreign Policy)
  7. ^ CP. (45) 152. 7 September 1945 entitled "Relations with Eire" being a Memorandum by the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs" and exhibiting a Memorandum by Maffey entitled "The Irish Question in 1945" dated 21 August 1945
  8. ^ "NPG 6597; John Loader Maffey, 1st Baron Rugby". National Portrait Gallery (UK). Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  9. ^ Burke's Peerage. 1959.
  • Oxbury, Harold. Great Britons: Twentieth-Century Lives. London: Promotional Reprint Company Ltd, 1993.
  • Kidd, Charles, Williamson, David (editors). Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage (1990 edition). New York: St Martin's Press, 1990.
Government offices
Preceded by Chief Commissioner of the
North-West Frontier Province

8 March 1921 – July 1923
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor-General of the Sudan
1926–1934
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies
1933–1937
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
New post
UK Representative to Ireland
1939–1949
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baron Rugby
1947–1969
Succeeded by

john, maffey, baron, rugby, john, loader, maffey, baron, rugby, gcmg, kcvo, july, 1877, april, 1969, british, civil, servant, diplomat, figure, anglo, irish, relations, during, second, world, right, honourablethe, lord, rugbygcmg, kcvo, cie1931, photographgove. John Loader Maffey 1st Baron Rugby GCMG KCB KCVO CSI CIE 1 July 1877 20 April 1969 was a British civil servant and diplomat who was a key figure in Anglo Irish relations during the Second World War The Right HonourableThe Lord RugbyGCMG KCB KCVO CSI CIE1931 photographGovernor General of the SudanIn office 31 October 1926 10 January 1934MonarchGeorge VPreceded bySir Geoffrey Francis ArcherSucceeded bySir George Stewart SymesPersonal detailsBornJohn Loader Maffey 1877 07 01 1 July 1877Died20 April 1969 1969 04 20 aged 91 SpouseDorothy Gladys HugginsChildrenAlan Maffey 2nd Baron RugbyHon Henry MaffeyPenelope Lady AitkenEducationRugby SchoolChrist Church OxfordOccupationCivil servant diplomat Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Career 2 Representative to Ireland 3 Family 4 Popular culture 5 Arms 6 See also 7 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit Maffey was the younger son of Thomas Maffey a commercial traveller of Rugby Warwickshire and his wife Mary Penelope daughter of John Loader He was educated at Rugby School and Christ Church Oxford Career edit He entered the Indian Civil Service in 1899 and notably served as Assistant Secretary to the Chief Commissioner of North West Frontier Province from 1912 to 1916 and then as Private Secretary to the Viceroy of India Lord Chelmsford from 1916 to 1920 and then Chief Commissioner of the North West Frontier Province from 1921 to 1924 After a disagreement with the British government in 1924 Maffey resigned from the Indian Civil Service In 1926 he became Governor General of Sudan followed in 1933 by his appointment as Permanent Under Secretary of State for the Colonies Representative to Ireland edit nbsp Portrait by Philip de Laszlo 1923On 14 September 1939 two weeks after the outbreak of World War II Maffey arrived in Dublin to discuss the possibility of the United Kingdom appointing a British representative to Ireland 1 Later following a discussion at the British War Cabinet Maffey was sent back to Dublin again with a letter from Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain appealing once again for the appointment of a representative The United Kingdom would not agree to appoint an ambassador or a minister because it would imply that Ireland was a foreign country outside the Commonwealth On the other hand Ireland would not agree to the appointment of a High Commissioner to Ireland because that would imply that Ireland was in the Commonwealth which the Irish government did not accept 2 As a compromise Chamberlain proposed the title United Kingdom Representative in Eire but de Valera rejected this insisting that the word in be replaced with to And so United Kingdom Representative to Eire was agreed upon and Maffey was appointed on 3 October 1939 3 For de Valera the change signified Ireland s independence sovereignty and equality with the United Kingdom 4 Chamberlain remarked that the title would seem to be well suited to an appointment such as this which is essentially an emergency arrangement intended to meet a temporary but urgent situation 5 After Maffey took up his appointment as Representative there were reports that the Irish Republican Army might abduct or kill him 6 Maffey held the post throughout the war years and until his retirement in 1949 During the war he was undoubtedly the most important foreign diplomat resident in Dublin given the complications of Ireland s neutrality policy As United Kingdom Representative to Eire Maffey quickly established a good working relationship with Eamon de Valera De Valera was personally in favour of the survival of democracy but did not necessarily trust the British to look after Ireland s best interests Maffey was vital in mediating between the Warlord Churchill and the Chief de Valera When de Valera was replaced by a coalition headed by John A Costello in 1948 Maffey again established a good working relationship with its members but he was scathing about the clumsy manner in which the declaration of a Republic was handled Mr Costello has handled the business in a slipshod and amateur fashion He encouraged John Betjeman the press attache to establish friendly relations with leading and rising figures in the Dublin literary world such as Patrick Kavanagh Maffey himself suggested the subject for one of Kavanagh s poems In his memorandum The Irish Question in 1945 7 addressed to the Secretary of State for the Dominions Maffey expressed his view To day after six years detachment Eire is more than ever a foreign country It is so dominated by the National Catholic Church as to be almost a theocratic State Gaelic is enforced in order to show that Eire is not one of the English speaking nations foreign games are frowned upon the war censorship has been misapplied for anti British purposes anti British feeling is fostered in school and by Church and State by a system of hereditary enemyindoctrination There is probably more widespread anti British sentiment in Eire to day than ever before Commenting on a recent attack by Churchill on de Valera Maffey reported Nothing helped Mr de Valera more than Mr Churchill s personal attack The Irish are a very distinct race and their marked characteristics persist strongly There still persist the dark Milesian strain the tribal vendetta spirit hatred and blarney religious fanaticism swift alternations between cruelty and laughter A knowledge of the North West Frontier tribes of India is a good introduction to an understanding of the Irish They are both very remarkable and in many ways attractive people with the same mental kinks We were wise enough not to attempt to bring the Afridis under our direct rule He continued Mr de Valera is not himself a hater of England as Mr Frank Aiken the Finance Minister is There is very little of the Irishman in Mr de Valera He is trusted because of his austerity and his cold mathematical approach to Anglo Irish problems He understands the narrowness of the Irish mind and does not venture on to broader paths though he might certainly have led his people out of spiritual bondage in 1941 when America came into the war Maffey felt that we can now talk to Eire on a cold factual horse trading basis knowing perfectly well that the cards are in our hands He continued It must be admitted that by ascribing Dominion status to Eire we placed in unfriendly hands a power to weaken the conception and responsibilities of Dominion status Eire has none of the attributes of a Dominion She is a Scotland gone wrong and we cannot afford to let her be completely divorced from the strategic and economic zone of England Scotland and Wales Turning to Northern Ireland Maffey remarked Unhappily it is not possible for us to feel satisfied with the state of affairs in Northern Ireland The Unionist Government are fighting an insidious enemy who is gaining upon them Their ballot box is not safe over a period against the Catholic birth rate The loyalty of the local garrison is not proof against the attractions of a lower income tax rate in Eire They are vulnerable to world criticism The British Government cannot afford to ignore the pronouncement made in November 1944 by the Catholic Archbishop of Westminster the Most Rev Dr Griffin that there is religious persecution at the present day in Northern Ireland In February 1947 Maffey was raised to the peerage as Baron Rugby of Rugby in the County of Warwick His portrait hangs in the National Portrait Gallery of the United Kingdom Painted by Philip de Laszlo in 1923 it was the study for two official portraits at Government House Peshawar and Christ Church Oxford 8 Family editLord Rugby married Dorothy Gladys Huggins daughter of Charles Lang Huggins on 28 August 1907 They became the parents of three children Alan Henry and Penelope Their only daughter Penelope married the war hero and Tory MP Sir William Aitken and became a well known socialite She was the mother of the former Conservative politician Jonathan Aitken and the actress Maria Aitken Her grandchildren are the actor Jack Davenport the artiste and environmentalist Alexandra Aitken also known as Uttrang Kaur Khalsa Victoria Aitken and William Aitken Lord Rugby died in April 1969 aged 91 He was succeeded in the barony by his eldest son Alan Loader Maffey 2nd Baron Rugby Popular culture editMaffey was played by Peter Copley in the 1983 RTE drama series Caught in a Free State He is a minor character in the 2010 novel Long Time Coming by Robert Goddard Arms editCoat of arms of John Maffey 1st Baron Rugby nbsp nbsp Crest A gauntlet fessewise grasping a lantern Proper Escutcheon Ermine a fort with two towers Proper issuant from the base a pile reversed Sable a chief dancettee Or surmounted by a pile Azure charged with an increscent Argent Supporters On either side an Afghan hound Proper gorged with a collar the chain reflexed over the back Or Motto Pass Friend 9 See also editList of Ambassadors from the United Kingdom to IrelandReferences edit De Valera Rule 1932 75 by David McCullagh Gill Books 2018 pg 172 De Valera Rule 1932 75 by David McCullagh Gill Books 2018 pg 173 The Geopolitics of Anglo Irish Relations in the 20th Century GR Sloan Leicester University Press 1997 De Valera Rule 1932 75 by David McCullagh Gill Books 2018 pg 174 No 29 UCDA P150 2548 Documents in Irish Foreign Policy No 114 NAI DFA 2006 39 Confidential report from John W Dulanty to Joseph P Walshe Dublin No 6 Secret Copy London 26 January 1940 Documents in Irish Foreign Policy CP 45 152 7 September 1945 entitled Relations with Eire being a Memorandum by the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs and exhibiting a Memorandum by Maffey entitled The Irish Question in 1945 dated 21 August 1945 NPG 6597 John Loader Maffey 1st Baron Rugby National Portrait Gallery UK Retrieved 17 November 2021 Burke s Peerage 1959 Oxbury Harold Great Britons Twentieth Century Lives London Promotional Reprint Company Ltd 1993 Kidd Charles Williamson David editors Debrett s Peerage and Baronetage 1990 edition New York St Martin s Press 1990 Government officesPreceded byAlfred Hamilton Grant Chief Commissioner of theNorth West Frontier Province8 March 1921 July 1923 Succeeded byHoratio Norman BoltonPreceded bySir Geoffrey Francis Archer Governor General of the Sudan1926 1934 Succeeded bySir George Stewart SymesPolitical officesPreceded bySir Samuel Wilson Permanent Under Secretary of State for the Colonies1933 1937 Succeeded bySir Cosmo ParkinsonDiplomatic postsPreceded byNew post UK Representative to Ireland1939 1949 Succeeded byGilbert LaithwaitePeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Baron Rugby1947 1969 Succeeded byAlan Loader Maffey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Maffey 1st Baron Rugby amp oldid 1179835196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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