fbpx
Wikipedia

Albert Stanley, 1st Baron Ashfield

Albert Henry Stanley, 1st Baron Ashfield, TD, PC (8 August 1874 – 4 November 1948), born Albert Henry Knattriess, was a British-American businessman who was managing director, then chairman of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London (UERL) from 1910 to 1933 and chairman of the London Passenger Transport Board (LPTB) from 1933 to 1947.

The Lord Ashfield
Lord Ashfield by Hugh Cecil, c. 1920
Chairman of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London/London Passenger Transport Board
In office
30 May 1919 – 31 October 1947
Preceded byLord George Hamilton
Succeeded byThe Lord Latham
President of the Board of Trade
In office
10 December 1916 – 26 May 1919
Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George
Preceded byWalter Runciman
Succeeded bySir Auckland Geddes
Member of Parliament
for Ashton under Lyne
In office
23 December 1916 – 31 January 1920
Preceded bySir Max Aitken, Bt
Succeeded bySir Walter de Frece
Personal details
Born
Albert Henry Knattriess

8 August 1874 (1874-08-08)
New Normanton, Derbyshire
United Kingdom
Died4 November 1948(1948-11-04) (aged 74)
London
Political partyConservative Unionist
SpouseGrace Lowrey

Although born in Britain, his early career was in the United States, where at a young age, he held senior positions in the developing tramway systems of Detroit and New Jersey. In 1898, he served in the United States Navy during the short Spanish–American War.

In 1907, his management skills led to his recruitment by the UERL, which was struggling through a financial crisis that threatened its existence. He quickly integrated the company's management and used advertising and public relations to improve profits. As managing director of the UERL from 1910, he led the take-over of competing underground railway companies and bus and tram operations to form an integrated transport operation known as the Combine.

He was Member of Parliament for Ashton-under-Lyne from December 1916 to January 1920 and was President of the Board of Trade between December 1916 and May 1919, reorganising the board and establishing specialist departments for various industries. He returned to the UERL and then chaired it and its successor the LPTB during the organisation's greatest period of expansion between the two World Wars, making it a world-respected organisation considered an exemplar of the best form of public administration.

Early life and career in United States edit

Stanley was born on 8 August 1874, in New Normanton, Derbyshire, England, the son of Henry and Elizabeth Knattriess (née Twigg). His father worked as a coachbuilder for the Pullman Company. In 1880, the family emigrated to Detroit in the United States, where he worked at Pullman's main factory. During the 1890s, the family changed its name to "Stanley".[1]

In 1888, at the age of 14, Stanley left school and went to work as an office boy at the Detroit Street Railways Company, which ran a horse-drawn tram system. He continued to study at evening school and worked long hours, often from 7.30 am to 10.00 pm.[2] His abilities were recognised early and Stanley was given responsibility for scheduling the services and preparing the timetables when he was 17. Following the expansion and electrification of the tramway, he became General Superintendent of the company in 1894.[3][4]

Stanley was a naval reservist and, during the brief Spanish–American War of 1898, he served in the United States Navy as a landsman in the crew of USS Yosemite alongside many others from Detroit.[1][5] In 1903, Stanley moved to New Jersey to become assistant general manager of the street railway department of the Public Service Corporation of New Jersey. The company had been struggling, but Stanley quickly improved its organisation and was promoted to general manager of the department in January 1904. In January 1907, he became general manager of the whole corporation, running a network of almost 1,000 route miles and 25,000 employees.[1][3]

In 1904, Stanley married Grace Lowrey (1878–1962) of New York.[1][6] The couple had two daughters: Marian Stanley (born 1906) and Grace Stanley (born 1907).[1][7][8]

Career in Britain edit

Rescue of the Underground Electric Railways Company edit

On 20 February 1907, Sir George Gibb, managing director of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London (UERL), appointed Stanley as its general manager.[9] The UERL was the holding company of four underground railways in central London.[10] Three of these (the District Railway, the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway and the Great Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway) were already in operation and the fourth (the Charing Cross, Euston and Hampstead Railway) was about to open.[11] The UERL had been established by American financier Charles Yerkes and much of the finance and equipment had been brought from the United States, so Stanley's experience of managing urban transit systems in that country made him an ideal candidate for the position. The cost of constructing three new lines in just a few years had put the company in a precarious monetary position and income was not sufficient to pay the interest on its loans.[12] Stanley's responsibility was to restore its finances.

 
The first Underground branded map from 1908, showing the UERL's lines and those of the other tube companies and the Metropolitan Railway

Only recently promoted to general manager of the New Jersey system, Stanley had been reluctant to take the position in London and took it for one year only, provided he would be free to return to America at the end of the year. He told the company's senior managers that the company was almost bankrupt and got resignation letters from each of them post-dated by six months.[13][14] Through better integration of the separate companies within the group and by improving advertising and public relations, he was quickly able to turn the fortunes of the company around,[1] while the company's chairman, Sir Edgar Speyer, renegotiated the debt repayments.[12] In 1908, Stanley joined the company's board and, in 1910, he became the managing director.[1]

With Commercial Manager Frank Pick, Stanley devised a plan to increase passenger numbers: developing the "UNDERGROUND" brand and establishing a joint booking system and co-ordinated fares throughout all of London's underground railways, including those not controlled by the UERL.[4] In July 1910, Stanley took the integration of the group further, when he persuaded previously reluctant American investors to approve the merger of the three tube railways into a single company.[15][16] Further consolidation came with the UERL's take-over of London General Omnibus Company (LGOC) in 1912 and the Central London Railway and the City and South London Railway on 1 January 1913. Of London's underground railways, only the Metropolitan Railway (and its subsidiaries the Great Northern & City Railway and the East London Railway) and the Waterloo & City Railway remained outside of the Underground Group's control. The LGOC was the dominant bus operator in the capital and its high profitability (it paid dividends of 18 per cent compared with Underground Group companies' dividends of 1 to 3 per cent) subsidised the rest of the group.[17] Stanley further expanded the group through shareholdings in London United Tramways and Metropolitan Electric Tramways and the foundation of bus builder AEC.[18] The much enlarged group became known as the Combine.[19] On 29 July 1914, Stanley was knighted in recognition of his services to transport.[20]

Stanley also planned extensions of the existing Underground Group's lines into new, undeveloped districts beyond the central area to encourage the development of new suburbs and new commuter traffic. The first of the extensions, the Bakerloo line to Queen's Park and Watford Junction, opened between 1915 and 1917.[11] The other expansion plans were postponed during World War I.[21]

Government edit

In 1915, Stanley was given a wartime role as Director-General of Mechanical Transport at the Ministry of Munitions.[22] In 1916, he was selected by Prime Minister David Lloyd George to become President of the Board of Trade. Lloyd George had previously promised this role to Sir Max Aitken (later Lord Beaverbrook), Member of Parliament for Ashton-under-Lyne. At that time, a member of parliament taking a cabinet post for the first time had to resign and stand for re-election in a by-election. Aitken had made arrangements to do this before Lloyd George decided to appoint Stanley to the position instead. Aitken, a friend of Stanley, was persuaded to continue with the resignation in exchange for a peerage so that Stanley could take his seat.[23] Stanley became President of the Board of Trade and was made a Privy Counsellor on 13 December 1916.[24] He was elected to parliament unopposed on 23 December 1916 as a Conservative Unionist.[1][25] At 42 years old he was the youngest member of Lloyd George's coalition government.[1]

At the 1918 general election, Stanley was opposed by Frederick Lister, the President of the National Federation of Discharged and Demobilized Sailors and Soldiers, in a challenge over the government's policy on war pensions. With the backing of Beaverbrook, who visited his former constituency to speak on his behalf, Stanley won the election.[26]

Stanley's achievements in office were mixed. He established various specialist departments to manage output in numerous industries and reorganised the structure of the Board.[18] However, despite previous successes with unions, his negotiations were ineffective. Writing to Leader of the House of Commons and future Prime Minister Bonar Law in January 1919, Lloyd George described Stanley as having "all the glibness of Runciman and that is apt to take in innocent persons like you and me ... Stanley, to put it quite bluntly, is a funk, and there is no room for funks in the modern world."[27] Stanley left the Board of Trade and the government in May 1919 and returned to the UERL.

Return to the Underground edit

Back at the Underground Group, Stanley returned to his role as managing director and also became its chairman, replacing Lord George Hamilton.[28] In the 1920 New Year Honours,[29] he was created Baron Ashfield, of Southwell in the County of Nottingham,[30][note 1] ending his term as an MP.[note 2] He and Pick reactivated their expansion plans, and one of the most significant periods in the organisation's history began, subsequently considered to be its heyday and sometimes called its "Golden Age".[32][33]

 
Lord Ashfield and his daughter Marian at the reopening of the City and South London Railway, 1 December 1924

The Central London Railway was extended to Ealing Broadway in 1920, and the Charing Cross, Euston and Hampstead Railway was extended to Hendon in 1923 and to Edgware in 1924. The City and South London Railway was reconstructed with larger diameter tunnels to take modern trains between 1922 and 1924 and extended to Morden in 1926.[11] In addition, a programme of modernising many of the Underground's busiest central London stations was started; providing them with escalators to replace lifts.[34] New rolling stock was gradually introduced with automatic sliding doors along the length of the carriage instead of manual end gates.[35] By the middle of the 1920s, the organisation had expanded to such an extent that a large, new headquarters building was constructed at 55 Broadway over St James's Park station.[36]

Starting in the early 1920s, competition from numerous small bus companies, nicknamed "pirates" because they operated irregular routes and plundered the LGOC's passengers, eroded the profitability of the Combine's bus operations and had a negative impact on the profitability of the whole group.[37] Ashfield lobbied the government for regulation of transport services in the London area. Starting in 1923, a series of legislative initiatives were made in this direction, with Ashfield and Labour London County Councillor (later MP and Minister of Transport) Herbert Morrison, at the forefront of debates as to the level of regulation and public control under which transport services should be brought. Ashfield aimed for regulation that would give the UERL group protection from competition and allow it to take substantive control of the LCC's tram system; Morrison preferred full public ownership.[38] Ashfield's proposal was fraught with controversy, The Spectator noting, "Everybody agrees that Lord Ashfield knows more about transport than anyone else, but people are naturally loth to give, not to him, but to his shareholders, the monopoly of conveying them."[39] After seven years of false starts, a bill was announced at the end of 1930 for the formation of the London Passenger Transport Board (LPTB), a public corporation that would take control of the UERL, the Metropolitan Railway and all bus and tram operators within an area designated as the London Passenger Transport Area.[40] As Ashfield had done with shareholders in 1910 over the consolidation of the three UERL controlled tube lines, he used his persuasiveness to obtain their agreements to the government buy-out of their stock.[41]

I have read this bill carefully, and I beg you to accept that I know what I am talking about. You cannot conceive I would be guilty of such folly as to suggest to you in a matter in which my whole life has been wrapped, that you should transfer your interests to a board subject to political interference, that could play ducks and drakes with your investments. Acts of Parliament are not treated like scraps of paper. They are scrupulously observed by all parties. I have promised the Minister my support. You may fail to support me, but in that event you will have to find somebody else to manage your undertakings. I have pledged my word and I am not going back on it.[42]

The Board was a compromise – public ownership but not full nationalisation – and came into existence on 1 July 1933.[43] Ashfield served as the organisation's chairman from its establishment in 1933 on an annual salary of £12,500 (approximately £600,000 today),[44][45] with Pick as Chief Executive.

The opening of extensions of the Piccadilly line to Uxbridge, Hounslow and Cockfosters followed in 1933.[11] On the Metropolitan Railway, Ashfield and Pick instigated a rationalisation of services. The barely used and loss-making Brill and Verney Junction branches beyond Aylesbury were closed in 1935 and 1936.[46] Freight services were reduced and electrification of the remaining steam operated sections of the line was planned.[47] In 1935, the availability of government-backed loans to stimulate the flagging economy allowed Ashfield and Pick to promote system-wide improvements under the New Works Programme for 1935–1940, including the transfer of the Metropolitan line's Stanmore services to the Bakerloo line in 1939, the Northern line's Northern Heights project and extension of the Central line to Ongar and Denham.[48][note 3]

Following a reorganisation of public transportation by the Labour government of Clement Attlee, the LPTB was scheduled to be nationalised along with the majority of British railway, bus, road haulage and waterway concerns from 1 January 1948. In advance of this, Ashfield resigned from the LPTB at the end of October 1947 and joined the board of the new British Transport Commission which was to operate all of the nationalised public transport systems. At nationalisation, the LPTB was to be abolished and replaced by the London Transport Executive. Lord Latham, a member of the LPTB and the incoming chairman of the new organisation, acted as temporary chairman for the last two months of the LPTB's existence.[49]

Other activities edit

In addition to his management of London Underground and brief political career, Ashfield held many directorships in transport undertakings and industry. He helped establish the Institute of Transport in 1919/20 and was one of its first presidents.[50] He was a director of the Mexican Railway Company and two railway companies in Cuba and a member of the 1931 Royal Commission on Railways and Transportation in Canada.[1][51] He was one of two government directors of the British Dyestuffs Corporation, its chairman from 1924 and was involved in the creation of Imperial Chemical Industries in 1926, of which he was subsequently a non-executive director. Ashfield was a director of the Midland Bank, Amalgamated Anthracite Collieries and chairman of Albany Ward Theatres, Associated Provincial Picture Houses, and Provincial Cinematograph Theatres.[1]

During World War I, he was Colonel of the Territorial Force Engineer and Railway Staff Corps and was Honorary Colonel of the Royal Artillery's 84th Light Anti Aircraft Regiment during World War II.[51]

Personality edit

Biographers of Stanley characterise him as having an "immensely active mind, and a strong sense of public duty" and a "great charm of manner and a sense of humour which concealed an almost ruthless determination" that made him a "formidable negotiator".[1] His "intuitive understanding of his fellow men" gave him "presence, which allowed him to dominate meetings effortlessly" and "inspired loyalty, devotion even, among his staff".[52] He was "a dapper ladies' man, something of a playboy tycoon, who was always smartly turned out and enjoyed moving in high society".[53]

Legacy edit

 
Transport for London's Ashfield House in West Kensington

Ashfield died on 4 November 1948 at 31 Queen's Gate, South Kensington.[1] During his near forty-year tenure as managing director and chairman of the Underground Group and the LPTB, Ashfield oversaw the transformation of a collection of unconnected, competing railway, bus and tram companies, some in severe financial difficulties, into a coherent and well managed transport organisation, internationally respected for its technical expertise and design style. Transport historian Christian Wolmar considers it "almost impossible to exaggerate the high regard in which LT was held during its all too brief heyday, attracting official visitors from around the world eager to learn the lessons of its success and apply them in their own countries." "It represented the apogee of a type of confident public administration ... with a reputation that any state organisation today would envy ... only made possible by the brilliance of its two famous leaders, Ashfield and Pick."[54]

A memorial to Ashfield was erected at 55 Broadway in 1950 and a blue plaque was placed at his home, 43 South Street, Mayfair in 1984.[55] A large office building at London Underground's Lillie Bridge Depot is named Ashfield House in his honour. It stands to the south of the District line tracks a short distance to the east of West Kensington station and is also visible from West Cromwell Road (A4).

  Lord Ashfield's Arms: "Azure a Pegasus rampant in chief three Estoiles Or". For supporters on each side of to the shield, Ashfield chose "an Electrical Mechanic, that on the dexter holding in the exterior hand a Coil of Wire and that on the sinister holding in the exterior hand a Pair of Pliers all proper." His Crest was "A Demi Stag proper gorged with a Wreath of Oak Vert resting the sinister foot upon a Bugle Horn Or". His motto was In alta tende (Strive for the Heights).[56]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Stanley's choice of title was inspired by the birth places of his father and grandfather: respectively, these were Sutton-in-Ashfield and Southwell, both in Nottinghamshire.[31]
  2. ^ In most cases, a peerage grants the holder a seat in the House of Lords. In Ashfield's time, substantive holders of peerages could not sit as members of parliament and his acceptance of the barony automatically disqualified him from being an MP.
  3. ^ Much of the works were interrupted by World War II. After the War, changed priorities, funding shortages and the creation of London's Metropolitan Green Belt led to much of the Northern line expansion plan being cancelled and delays in completing other plans.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Barker 2004.
  2. ^ Bridges & Tiltman 1928, p. 14.
  3. ^ a b Bridges & Tiltman 1928, p. 17.
  4. ^ a b Wolmar 2005, p. 199.
  5. ^ Stringham 1929, pp. 41–42.
  6. ^ "Today's Arrangements". The Times (55298): 11. 25 January 1962. Retrieved 9 December 2010. (subscription required)
  7. ^ "Court Circular". The Times (43403): 15. 26 July 1923. Retrieved 24 August 2010. (subscription required)
  8. ^ "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  9. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 196.
  10. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 169.
  11. ^ a b c d Rose 1999.
  12. ^ a b Wolmar 2005, p. 197.
  13. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 200.
  14. ^ Bridges & Tiltman 1928, p. 18.
  15. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 198.
  16. ^ Day & Reed 2008, p. 79.
  17. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 204.
  18. ^ a b "Obituary – Lord Ashfield, Reorganizer of London Transport". The Times (51221): 7. 5 November 1948. Retrieved 9 April 2010. (subscription required)
  19. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 193.
  20. ^ "No. 28854". The London Gazette. 31 July 1914. p. 5963.
  21. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 207.
  22. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 325.
  23. ^ Blake 1955, pp. 346–347.
  24. ^ "No. 29865". The London Gazette. 15 December 1916. p. 12225.
  25. ^ "The New Ministers – Sir A Stanley and Mr Fisher Returned". The Times (41359): 3. 26 December 1916. Retrieved 9 April 2010. (subscription required)
  26. ^ Wootton 1963, pp. 204–205.
  27. ^ Lloyd George letter to Bonar Law, 29 January 1919 – quoted in Morgan 1979, p. 51.
  28. ^ "Sir A. Stanley On Railway Services". The Times (42114): 12. 31 May 1919. Retrieved 9 April 2010. (subscription required)
  29. ^ "No. 31712". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 1919. p. 1.
  30. ^ "No. 31730". The London Gazette. 13 January 1920. p. 559.
  31. ^ Barman 1979, pp. 72–73.
  32. ^ Wolmar 2005, pp. 270, 291.
  33. ^ "Designing Modern Britain". Design Museum. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  34. ^ Day & Reed 2008, p. 93.
  35. ^ Day & Reed 2008, pp. 104–107.
  36. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 269.
  37. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 259.
  38. ^ Wolmar 2005, pp. 259–262.
  39. ^ "We wonder how different this is from Lord Ashfield's ideal". The Spectator. London. 5 April 1924.
  40. ^ "No. 33668". The London Gazette. 9 December 1930. pp. 7905–7907.
  41. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 264.
  42. ^ "London Underground Agrees to Traffic Board Scheme". Electric Railway Journal. 75 (6): 332. June 1931. Retrieved 15 April 2010.
  43. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 266.
  44. ^ "London Passenger Transport Board – answers". Hansard. 278. 22 May 1933. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  45. ^ 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.
  46. ^ Day & Reed 2008, p. 120.
  47. ^ Jones 1974, p. 56.
  48. ^ Day & Reed 2008, p. 118.
  49. ^ "L.P.T.B. Chairmanship". The Times (50908): 4. 3 November 1947. Retrieved 30 July 2009. (subscription required)
  50. ^ "Personal Notes". Bus Transportation. 1 (9). McGraw-Hill: 518–519. September 1922. Retrieved 1 November 2010.
  51. ^ a b "Ashfield". Who Was Who. A & C Black/Oxford University Press. 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2010.
  52. ^ Wolmar 2005, pp. 219–220.
  53. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 256.
  54. ^ Wolmar 2005, p. 255.
  55. ^ "Stanley, Albert Henry, Lord Ashfield (1874–1948)". Blue Plaques. English Heritage. Retrieved 29 April 2011.
  56. ^ "Ashfield, Baron (UK, 1920 - 1948)". Cracroft's Peerage. Retrieved 29 May 2021.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Albert Stanley
  • London Transport Museum Photographic Archive
    • Albert Henry Stanley, 1907
    • Lord Ashfield (right) with Frank Pick, 1923
    • Memorial to Lord Ashfield at 55 Broadway, erected 1950
    • "Other images of Lord Ashfield".
  • National Portrait Gallery
    • Photograph of Lord Ashfield by Howard Coster, 1936
    • Caricature by Anthony Wysard of Lord Ashfield asleep in the lap of Jacob Epstein's controversial statute Night, 1938
  • The Spanish American War Centennial Website, The Crew of the USS Yosemite
  • Plaque #360 on Open Plaques Lord Ashfield's blue plaque.
  • Hesilrige, Arthur G. M. (1921). Debrett's Peerage and Titles of courtesy. London: London: Dean & son, limited. p. 65.
Political offices
Preceded by President of the Board of Trade
1916–1919
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Ashton-under-Lyne
1916–1920
Succeeded by
Business positions
Preceded by Chairman,
Underground Electric Railways Company of London

1919–1933
Abolished
New title
New organisation
Chairman,
London Passenger Transport Board

1933–1947
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baron Ashfield
1920–1948
Extinct

albert, stanley, baron, ashfield, albert, henry, stanley, baron, ashfield, august, 1874, november, 1948, born, albert, henry, knattriess, british, american, businessman, managing, director, then, chairman, underground, electric, railways, company, london, uerl. Albert Henry Stanley 1st Baron Ashfield TD PC 8 August 1874 4 November 1948 born Albert Henry Knattriess was a British American businessman who was managing director then chairman of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London UERL from 1910 to 1933 and chairman of the London Passenger Transport Board LPTB from 1933 to 1947 The Right HonourableThe Lord AshfieldTD PCLord Ashfield by Hugh Cecil c 1920Chairman of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London London Passenger Transport BoardIn office 30 May 1919 31 October 1947Preceded byLord George HamiltonSucceeded byThe Lord LathamPresident of the Board of TradeIn office 10 December 1916 26 May 1919Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd GeorgePreceded byWalter RuncimanSucceeded bySir Auckland GeddesMember of Parliament for Ashton under LyneIn office 23 December 1916 31 January 1920Preceded bySir Max Aitken BtSucceeded bySir Walter de FrecePersonal detailsBornAlbert Henry Knattriess8 August 1874 1874 08 08 New Normanton DerbyshireUnited KingdomDied4 November 1948 1948 11 04 aged 74 LondonPolitical partyConservative UnionistSpouseGrace Lowrey Although born in Britain his early career was in the United States where at a young age he held senior positions in the developing tramway systems of Detroit and New Jersey In 1898 he served in the United States Navy during the short Spanish American War In 1907 his management skills led to his recruitment by the UERL which was struggling through a financial crisis that threatened its existence He quickly integrated the company s management and used advertising and public relations to improve profits As managing director of the UERL from 1910 he led the take over of competing underground railway companies and bus and tram operations to form an integrated transport operation known as the Combine He was Member of Parliament for Ashton under Lyne from December 1916 to January 1920 and was President of the Board of Trade between December 1916 and May 1919 reorganising the board and establishing specialist departments for various industries He returned to the UERL and then chaired it and its successor the LPTB during the organisation s greatest period of expansion between the two World Wars making it a world respected organisation considered an exemplar of the best form of public administration Contents 1 Early life and career in United States 2 Career in Britain 2 1 Rescue of the Underground Electric Railways Company 2 2 Government 2 3 Return to the Underground 2 4 Other activities 3 Personality 4 Legacy 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksEarly life and career in United States editStanley was born on 8 August 1874 in New Normanton Derbyshire England the son of Henry and Elizabeth Knattriess nee Twigg His father worked as a coachbuilder for the Pullman Company In 1880 the family emigrated to Detroit in the United States where he worked at Pullman s main factory During the 1890s the family changed its name to Stanley 1 In 1888 at the age of 14 Stanley left school and went to work as an office boy at the Detroit Street Railways Company which ran a horse drawn tram system He continued to study at evening school and worked long hours often from 7 30 am to 10 00 pm 2 His abilities were recognised early and Stanley was given responsibility for scheduling the services and preparing the timetables when he was 17 Following the expansion and electrification of the tramway he became General Superintendent of the company in 1894 3 4 Stanley was a naval reservist and during the brief Spanish American War of 1898 he served in the United States Navy as a landsman in the crew of USS Yosemite alongside many others from Detroit 1 5 In 1903 Stanley moved to New Jersey to become assistant general manager of the street railway department of the Public Service Corporation of New Jersey The company had been struggling but Stanley quickly improved its organisation and was promoted to general manager of the department in January 1904 In January 1907 he became general manager of the whole corporation running a network of almost 1 000 route miles and 25 000 employees 1 3 In 1904 Stanley married Grace Lowrey 1878 1962 of New York 1 6 The couple had two daughters Marian Stanley born 1906 and Grace Stanley born 1907 1 7 8 Career in Britain editRescue of the Underground Electric Railways Company edit On 20 February 1907 Sir George Gibb managing director of the Underground Electric Railways Company of London UERL appointed Stanley as its general manager 9 The UERL was the holding company of four underground railways in central London 10 Three of these the District Railway the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway and the Great Northern Piccadilly and Brompton Railway were already in operation and the fourth the Charing Cross Euston and Hampstead Railway was about to open 11 The UERL had been established by American financier Charles Yerkes and much of the finance and equipment had been brought from the United States so Stanley s experience of managing urban transit systems in that country made him an ideal candidate for the position The cost of constructing three new lines in just a few years had put the company in a precarious monetary position and income was not sufficient to pay the interest on its loans 12 Stanley s responsibility was to restore its finances nbsp The first Underground branded map from 1908 showing the UERL s lines and those of the other tube companies and the Metropolitan Railway Only recently promoted to general manager of the New Jersey system Stanley had been reluctant to take the position in London and took it for one year only provided he would be free to return to America at the end of the year He told the company s senior managers that the company was almost bankrupt and got resignation letters from each of them post dated by six months 13 14 Through better integration of the separate companies within the group and by improving advertising and public relations he was quickly able to turn the fortunes of the company around 1 while the company s chairman Sir Edgar Speyer renegotiated the debt repayments 12 In 1908 Stanley joined the company s board and in 1910 he became the managing director 1 With Commercial Manager Frank Pick Stanley devised a plan to increase passenger numbers developing the UNDERGROUND brand and establishing a joint booking system and co ordinated fares throughout all of London s underground railways including those not controlled by the UERL 4 In July 1910 Stanley took the integration of the group further when he persuaded previously reluctant American investors to approve the merger of the three tube railways into a single company 15 16 Further consolidation came with the UERL s take over of London General Omnibus Company LGOC in 1912 and the Central London Railway and the City and South London Railway on 1 January 1913 Of London s underground railways only the Metropolitan Railway and its subsidiaries the Great Northern amp City Railway and the East London Railway and the Waterloo amp City Railway remained outside of the Underground Group s control The LGOC was the dominant bus operator in the capital and its high profitability it paid dividends of 18 per cent compared with Underground Group companies dividends of 1 to 3 per cent subsidised the rest of the group 17 Stanley further expanded the group through shareholdings in London United Tramways and Metropolitan Electric Tramways and the foundation of bus builder AEC 18 The much enlarged group became known as the Combine 19 On 29 July 1914 Stanley was knighted in recognition of his services to transport 20 Stanley also planned extensions of the existing Underground Group s lines into new undeveloped districts beyond the central area to encourage the development of new suburbs and new commuter traffic The first of the extensions the Bakerloo line to Queen s Park and Watford Junction opened between 1915 and 1917 11 The other expansion plans were postponed during World War I 21 Government edit In 1915 Stanley was given a wartime role as Director General of Mechanical Transport at the Ministry of Munitions 22 In 1916 he was selected by Prime Minister David Lloyd George to become President of the Board of Trade Lloyd George had previously promised this role to Sir Max Aitken later Lord Beaverbrook Member of Parliament for Ashton under Lyne At that time a member of parliament taking a cabinet post for the first time had to resign and stand for re election in a by election Aitken had made arrangements to do this before Lloyd George decided to appoint Stanley to the position instead Aitken a friend of Stanley was persuaded to continue with the resignation in exchange for a peerage so that Stanley could take his seat 23 Stanley became President of the Board of Trade and was made a Privy Counsellor on 13 December 1916 24 He was elected to parliament unopposed on 23 December 1916 as a Conservative Unionist 1 25 At 42 years old he was the youngest member of Lloyd George s coalition government 1 At the 1918 general election Stanley was opposed by Frederick Lister the President of the National Federation of Discharged and Demobilized Sailors and Soldiers in a challenge over the government s policy on war pensions With the backing of Beaverbrook who visited his former constituency to speak on his behalf Stanley won the election 26 Stanley s achievements in office were mixed He established various specialist departments to manage output in numerous industries and reorganised the structure of the Board 18 However despite previous successes with unions his negotiations were ineffective Writing to Leader of the House of Commons and future Prime Minister Bonar Law in January 1919 Lloyd George described Stanley as having all the glibness of Runciman and that is apt to take in innocent persons like you and me Stanley to put it quite bluntly is a funk and there is no room for funks in the modern world 27 Stanley left the Board of Trade and the government in May 1919 and returned to the UERL Return to the Underground edit Back at the Underground Group Stanley returned to his role as managing director and also became its chairman replacing Lord George Hamilton 28 In the 1920 New Year Honours 29 he was created Baron Ashfield of Southwell in the County of Nottingham 30 note 1 ending his term as an MP note 2 He and Pick reactivated their expansion plans and one of the most significant periods in the organisation s history began subsequently considered to be its heyday and sometimes called its Golden Age 32 33 nbsp Lord Ashfield and his daughter Marian at the reopening of the City and South London Railway 1 December 1924 The Central London Railway was extended to Ealing Broadway in 1920 and the Charing Cross Euston and Hampstead Railway was extended to Hendon in 1923 and to Edgware in 1924 The City and South London Railway was reconstructed with larger diameter tunnels to take modern trains between 1922 and 1924 and extended to Morden in 1926 11 In addition a programme of modernising many of the Underground s busiest central London stations was started providing them with escalators to replace lifts 34 New rolling stock was gradually introduced with automatic sliding doors along the length of the carriage instead of manual end gates 35 By the middle of the 1920s the organisation had expanded to such an extent that a large new headquarters building was constructed at 55 Broadway over St James s Park station 36 Starting in the early 1920s competition from numerous small bus companies nicknamed pirates because they operated irregular routes and plundered the LGOC s passengers eroded the profitability of the Combine s bus operations and had a negative impact on the profitability of the whole group 37 Ashfield lobbied the government for regulation of transport services in the London area Starting in 1923 a series of legislative initiatives were made in this direction with Ashfield and Labour London County Councillor later MP and Minister of Transport Herbert Morrison at the forefront of debates as to the level of regulation and public control under which transport services should be brought Ashfield aimed for regulation that would give the UERL group protection from competition and allow it to take substantive control of the LCC s tram system Morrison preferred full public ownership 38 Ashfield s proposal was fraught with controversy The Spectator noting Everybody agrees that Lord Ashfield knows more about transport than anyone else but people are naturally loth to give not to him but to his shareholders the monopoly of conveying them 39 After seven years of false starts a bill was announced at the end of 1930 for the formation of the London Passenger Transport Board LPTB a public corporation that would take control of the UERL the Metropolitan Railway and all bus and tram operators within an area designated as the London Passenger Transport Area 40 As Ashfield had done with shareholders in 1910 over the consolidation of the three UERL controlled tube lines he used his persuasiveness to obtain their agreements to the government buy out of their stock 41 I have read this bill carefully and I beg you to accept that I know what I am talking about You cannot conceive I would be guilty of such folly as to suggest to you in a matter in which my whole life has been wrapped that you should transfer your interests to a board subject to political interference that could play ducks and drakes with your investments Acts of Parliament are not treated like scraps of paper They are scrupulously observed by all parties I have promised the Minister my support You may fail to support me but in that event you will have to find somebody else to manage your undertakings I have pledged my word and I am not going back on it 42 The Board was a compromise public ownership but not full nationalisation and came into existence on 1 July 1933 43 Ashfield served as the organisation s chairman from its establishment in 1933 on an annual salary of 12 500 approximately 600 000 today 44 45 with Pick as Chief Executive The opening of extensions of the Piccadilly line to Uxbridge Hounslow and Cockfosters followed in 1933 11 On the Metropolitan Railway Ashfield and Pick instigated a rationalisation of services The barely used and loss making Brill and Verney Junction branches beyond Aylesbury were closed in 1935 and 1936 46 Freight services were reduced and electrification of the remaining steam operated sections of the line was planned 47 In 1935 the availability of government backed loans to stimulate the flagging economy allowed Ashfield and Pick to promote system wide improvements under the New Works Programme for 1935 1940 including the transfer of the Metropolitan line s Stanmore services to the Bakerloo line in 1939 the Northern line s Northern Heights project and extension of the Central line to Ongar and Denham 48 note 3 Following a reorganisation of public transportation by the Labour government of Clement Attlee the LPTB was scheduled to be nationalised along with the majority of British railway bus road haulage and waterway concerns from 1 January 1948 In advance of this Ashfield resigned from the LPTB at the end of October 1947 and joined the board of the new British Transport Commission which was to operate all of the nationalised public transport systems At nationalisation the LPTB was to be abolished and replaced by the London Transport Executive Lord Latham a member of the LPTB and the incoming chairman of the new organisation acted as temporary chairman for the last two months of the LPTB s existence 49 Other activities edit In addition to his management of London Underground and brief political career Ashfield held many directorships in transport undertakings and industry He helped establish the Institute of Transport in 1919 20 and was one of its first presidents 50 He was a director of the Mexican Railway Company and two railway companies in Cuba and a member of the 1931 Royal Commission on Railways and Transportation in Canada 1 51 He was one of two government directors of the British Dyestuffs Corporation its chairman from 1924 and was involved in the creation of Imperial Chemical Industries in 1926 of which he was subsequently a non executive director Ashfield was a director of the Midland Bank Amalgamated Anthracite Collieries and chairman of Albany Ward Theatres Associated Provincial Picture Houses and Provincial Cinematograph Theatres 1 During World War I he was Colonel of the Territorial Force Engineer and Railway Staff Corps and was Honorary Colonel of the Royal Artillery s 84th Light Anti Aircraft Regiment during World War II 51 Personality editBiographers of Stanley characterise him as having an immensely active mind and a strong sense of public duty and a great charm of manner and a sense of humour which concealed an almost ruthless determination that made him a formidable negotiator 1 His intuitive understanding of his fellow men gave him presence which allowed him to dominate meetings effortlessly and inspired loyalty devotion even among his staff 52 He was a dapper ladies man something of a playboy tycoon who was always smartly turned out and enjoyed moving in high society 53 Legacy edit nbsp Transport for London s Ashfield House in West Kensington Ashfield died on 4 November 1948 at 31 Queen s Gate South Kensington 1 During his near forty year tenure as managing director and chairman of the Underground Group and the LPTB Ashfield oversaw the transformation of a collection of unconnected competing railway bus and tram companies some in severe financial difficulties into a coherent and well managed transport organisation internationally respected for its technical expertise and design style Transport historian Christian Wolmar considers it almost impossible to exaggerate the high regard in which LT was held during its all too brief heyday attracting official visitors from around the world eager to learn the lessons of its success and apply them in their own countries It represented the apogee of a type of confident public administration with a reputation that any state organisation today would envy only made possible by the brilliance of its two famous leaders Ashfield and Pick 54 A memorial to Ashfield was erected at 55 Broadway in 1950 and a blue plaque was placed at his home 43 South Street Mayfair in 1984 55 A large office building at London Underground s Lillie Bridge Depot is named Ashfield House in his honour It stands to the south of the District line tracks a short distance to the east of West Kensington station and is also visible from West Cromwell Road A4 nbsp Lord Ashfield s Arms Azure a Pegasus rampant in chief three Estoiles Or For supporters on each side of to the shield Ashfield chose an Electrical Mechanic that on the dexter holding in the exterior hand a Coil of Wire and that on the sinister holding in the exterior hand a Pair of Pliers all proper His Crest was A Demi Stag proper gorged with a Wreath of Oak Vert resting the sinister foot upon a Bugle Horn Or His motto was In alta tende Strive for the Heights 56 Notes edit Stanley s choice of title was inspired by the birth places of his father and grandfather respectively these were Sutton in Ashfield and Southwell both in Nottinghamshire 31 In most cases a peerage grants the holder a seat in the House of Lords In Ashfield s time substantive holders of peerages could not sit as members of parliament and his acceptance of the barony automatically disqualified him from being an MP Much of the works were interrupted by World War II After the War changed priorities funding shortages and the creation of London s Metropolitan Green Belt led to much of the Northern line expansion plan being cancelled and delays in completing other plans References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m Barker 2004 Bridges amp Tiltman 1928 p 14 a b Bridges amp Tiltman 1928 p 17 a b Wolmar 2005 p 199 Stringham 1929 pp 41 42 Today s Arrangements The Times 55298 11 25 January 1962 Retrieved 9 December 2010 subscription required Court Circular The Times 43403 15 26 July 1923 Retrieved 24 August 2010 subscription required Index entry FreeBMD ONS Retrieved 9 December 2010 Wolmar 2005 p 196 Wolmar 2005 p 169 a b c d Rose 1999 a b Wolmar 2005 p 197 Wolmar 2005 p 200 Bridges amp Tiltman 1928 p 18 Wolmar 2005 p 198 Day amp Reed 2008 p 79 Wolmar 2005 p 204 a b Obituary Lord Ashfield Reorganizer of London Transport The Times 51221 7 5 November 1948 Retrieved 9 April 2010 subscription required Wolmar 2005 p 193 No 28854 The London Gazette 31 July 1914 p 5963 Wolmar 2005 p 207 Wolmar 2005 p 325 Blake 1955 pp 346 347 No 29865 The London Gazette 15 December 1916 p 12225 The New Ministers Sir A Stanley and Mr Fisher Returned The Times 41359 3 26 December 1916 Retrieved 9 April 2010 subscription required Wootton 1963 pp 204 205 Lloyd George letter to Bonar Law 29 January 1919 quoted in Morgan 1979 p 51 Sir A Stanley On Railway Services The Times 42114 12 31 May 1919 Retrieved 9 April 2010 subscription required No 31712 The London Gazette Supplement 30 December 1919 p 1 No 31730 The London Gazette 13 January 1920 p 559 Barman 1979 pp 72 73 Wolmar 2005 pp 270 291 Designing Modern Britain Design Museum Retrieved 9 April 2010 Day amp Reed 2008 p 93 Day amp Reed 2008 pp 104 107 Wolmar 2005 p 269 Wolmar 2005 p 259 Wolmar 2005 pp 259 262 We wonder how different this is from Lord Ashfield s ideal The Spectator London 5 April 1924 No 33668 The London Gazette 9 December 1930 pp 7905 7907 Wolmar 2005 p 264 London Underground Agrees to Traffic Board Scheme Electric Railway Journal 75 6 332 June 1931 Retrieved 15 April 2010 Wolmar 2005 p 266 London Passenger Transport Board answers Hansard 278 22 May 1933 Retrieved 9 April 2010 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 Day amp Reed 2008 p 120 Jones 1974 p 56 Day amp Reed 2008 p 118 L P T B Chairmanship The Times 50908 4 3 November 1947 Retrieved 30 July 2009 subscription required Personal Notes Bus Transportation 1 9 McGraw Hill 518 519 September 1922 Retrieved 1 November 2010 a b Ashfield Who Was Who A amp C Black Oxford University Press 2007 Retrieved 9 April 2010 Wolmar 2005 pp 219 220 Wolmar 2005 p 256 Wolmar 2005 p 255 Stanley Albert Henry Lord Ashfield 1874 1948 Blue Plaques English Heritage Retrieved 29 April 2011 Ashfield Baron UK 1920 1948 Cracroft s Peerage Retrieved 29 May 2021 Sources editBarker Theo 2004 Albert Henry Stanley 1874 1948 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 36241 Retrieved 9 April 2010 Subscription or UK public library membership required Barman Christian 1979 The Man Who Built London Transport A Biography of Frank Pick David amp Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 7753 6 Blake Robert 1955 The Unknown Prime Minister The Life and Times of Andrew Bonar Law 1858 1923 Eyre amp Spottiswoode Bridges Thomas Charles Tiltman Hubert Hessell 1928 Do Your Job the Best You Know How The Story of Lord Ashfield Kings of Commerce George G Harrap amp Co ISBN 978 0 8369 0102 3 Retrieved 9 April 2010 Day John R Reed John 2008 1963 The Story of London s Underground Capital Transport ISBN 978 1 85414 316 7 Jones Ken 1974 The Wotton Tramway Brill Branch Locomotion Papers The Oakwood Press ISBN 978 0 85361 149 3 Morgan Kenneth O 1979 Consensus and Disunity The Lloyd George Coalition Government of 1918 1922 Clarendon Press Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 822975 9 Retrieved 9 April 2010 Rose Douglas 1999 1980 The London Underground A Diagrammatic History Douglas Rose Capital Transport ISBN 978 1 85414 219 1 Stringham Joseph S 1929 The Story of the U S S Yosemitein 1898 Detroit Retrieved 24 August 2010 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wolmar Christian 2005 The Subterranean Railway How the London Underground Was Built and How It Changed the City Forever Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1 84354 023 6 Wootton Graham 1963 The Politics of Influence Routledge ISBN 9780836901023 Retrieved 9 April 2010 External links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp London transport portal Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Albert Stanley London Transport Museum Photographic Archive Albert Henry Stanley 1907 Lord Ashfield right with Frank Pick 1923 Memorial to Lord Ashfield at 55 Broadway erected 1950 Other images of Lord Ashfield National Portrait Gallery Photograph of Lord Ashfield by Howard Coster 1936 Caricature by Anthony Wysard of Lord Ashfield asleep in the lap of Jacob Epstein s controversial statute Night 1938 The Spanish American War Centennial Website The Crew of the USS Yosemite Plaque 360 on Open Plaques Lord Ashfield s blue plaque Hesilrige Arthur G M 1921 Debrett s Peerage and Titles of courtesy London London Dean amp son limited p 65 Political offices Preceded byWalter Runciman President of the Board of Trade1916 1919 Succeeded bySir Auckland Geddes Parliament of the United Kingdom Preceded bySir Max Aitken Bt Member of Parliament for Ashton under Lyne1916 1920 Succeeded bySir Walter de Frece Business positions Preceded byLord George Hamilton Chairman Underground Electric Railways Company of London1919 1933 Abolished New titleNew organisation Chairman London Passenger Transport Board1933 1947 Succeeded byLord Latham Pro Tempore Peerage of the United Kingdom New creation Baron Ashfield1920 1948 Extinct Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Albert Stanley 1st Baron Ashfield amp oldid 1192303393, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.