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Hedley Le Bas

Sir Hedley Francis Le Bas (1868–1926) was a British publisher and advertising executive.[1] He is best known for the World War I recruiting campaign using the slogan "Your Country Needs You".[2]

Hedley Le Bas
Born(1868-05-19)May 19, 1868
Jersey, England
Died1926(1926-00-00) (aged 57–58)
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Publisher, Advertising executive
Known for"Your Country Needs You" army recruiting campaign
Notable workCaxton Publishing
Spouse
Emma Mary Barnes
(m. 1900)
ChildrenHedley Ernest Le Bas (1901–1942)
Joan Mary Le Bas (1912-1994)
ParentThomas Amice Le Bas
"Your Country Needs You", iconic British recruiting poster with Lord Kitchener, the campaign being the work of Hedley Le Bas[2]

Early life

He was born in Jersey on 19 May 1868, the son of ship's captain, Thomas Amice Le Bas, and educated there.[3] In early life he was a professional soldier, serving seven years in the 15th Hussars from age 18. He then went into publishing, working for Blackie in Manchester. He became involved also in advertising to promote books, with the Caxton Publishing Company and Caxton Advertising Agency, both founded in 1899.[4][5][6][7]

In 1910 Le Bas bought out partners T. C. and E. C. Jack in Caxton Publishing, creating a private limited company.[8] He went on to become a director of George Newnes, Ltd and C. Arthur Pearson, Ltd.[9] On the board of Caxton Publishing he encountered George Riddell, who became a golfing companion and friend, for a time.[10]

Government work and World War I

The work of Le Bas on army recruitment followed an October 1913 encounter over a golf match involving George Riddell, with J. E. B. Seely, the Secretary of State for War.[4] It was launched by the Caxton agency in January 1914, with newspaper advertisements and a recruiting film, after Caxtons had consulted with Wareham Smith (1874–1938) and Thomas Baron Russell (1865–1931), who had worked as advertising managers, respectively with the Daily Mail and The Times.[11] Le Bas was a Liberal Party candidate, for Watford, but stepped down in July 1914 for health reasons.[12]

On the outbreak of World War I, Le Bas was summoned by the British government, and he formed a committee of advertising men to promote recruitment.[13] The celebrated poster of autumn 1914 was based on an image of Lord Kitchener by Alfred Leete.[14] The poster campaign itself was in the hands of the Parliamentary Recruitment Committee. Le Bas and his colleague Eric Field from the Caxton Advertising Agency were also creative initiators in the Daddy, what did you do in the Great War? poster campaign of 1915.[15]

In 1915 Le Bas was recommended by Lord Northcliffe to Reginald McKenna as someone to promote the first British war loan. His view was that politicians of the time had little idea how to exploit the media.[16][17] During 1915 his recruiting efforts turned to Ireland, and there he drew on his army service in Waterford, exploiting in a town with a substantial munitions industry the appeal of military bands.[18][19] In February of that year, he analysed for David Lloyd George the issue of Irish nationalist volunteers, and in particular the Irish Volunteers force, in the eyes of the army: taken for a Tory, he had been told they were not wanted, for the political reasons tied up with Irish Home Rule.[20]

Also in 1915, Le Bas fell out in a very public way with Riddell. Both significant in the Liberal Press, they were divided by the party faultline separating McKenna from Lloyd George, their respective golfing partners in a June 1915 match. Matters came to a head with Riddell suing Le Bas, over an alleged claim of fraud, and stating that Le Bas had tried to blackmail him over the divorce that ended his first marriage.[21]

Le Bas was knighted in 1916, the first advertising person to be honoured in that way.[3][22] He stated a conviction that "publicity will find or create anything".[23] In that year he became the publicity officer of the National Organising Committee for War Savings (NCWS).[24]

After Kitchener's death at sea in 1916, Le Bas organised the Lord Kitchener National Memorial Fund, and in 1917 edited the Lord Kitchener Memorial Book that raised funds for it.[6]

Later life

Le Bas brought a libel action against the Daily Mail, alleging that in articles and letters the newspaper had published, he had been accused of trying to influence the press in corrupt ways. He lost the case, in April 1919.[25]

In the early 1920s, Le Bas was a director of the New Statesman, offering advice to make it financially viable.[26] The editor at the time was Clifford Sharp. Le Bas discovered that the circulation was understated by a factor of nearly three, and proposed raising the advertising rate.[27]

In 1921 Le Bas founded, with friends, the Lucifer Golfing Society, a gentlemans' club that still exists; the story runs that the proposed name was the Match Club, but such a club already existed, and a pun ("lucifer" for match, as well as a euphemism for the Devil) was incorporated in the title.[28][29] He was further involved in the Lord Kitchener National Memorial Fund, founding in 1922 an association of former Kitchener Scholars.[30]

In 1923, Le Bas's residence was given as Great Tylers, Reigate.[31] At the end of his life, he lived at Chussex, Walton Heath, a 1908 house designed by Edwin Lutyens.[32][33] In 1925 he was taking a further interest in the New Statesman, working to buy up shares in it on behalf of Ramsay MacDonald who was seeking control.

Family

Le Bas married in 1900 Emma Mary Barnes, daughter of Joseph Barnes of Dorchester. They had a son Hedley Ernest (1901–1942), and a daughter Joan Mary (1912-1994).[3][34]

Notes

  1. ^ Webb (2008-10-14). The Letters of Sidney and Beatrice Webb: Volume 3, Pilgrimage 1912-1947. Cambridge University Press. p. 49. ISBN 9780521083980. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  2. ^ a b Toye, Richard; Gottlieb, Julie (2005-11-05). Making Reputations: Power, Persuasion and the Individual in Modern British Politics. I.B.Tauris. p. 36. ISBN 9781850438410. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  3. ^ a b c Dod's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, of Great Britain and Ireland: Including All the Titled Classes. S. Low, Marston & Company. 1917. p. 517.
  4. ^ a b Messinger, Gary S. (1992). British Propaganda and the State in the First World War. Manchester University Press. p. 214. ISBN 9780719030147. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  5. ^ Götter, Christian (2016-01-01). Die Macht der Wirkungsannahmen: Medienarbeit des britischen und deutschen Militärs in der ersten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts (in German). De Gruyter. p. 60. ISBN 9783110452204. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  6. ^ a b Annual Register. J. Dodsley. 1927. p. 126.
  7. ^ Wormell, Jeremy (2002-09-11). The Management of the National Debt of the United Kingdom 1900-1932. Routledge. p. 754. ISBN 9781134604074. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  8. ^ The Publisher. 1910. p. 714.
  9. ^ Whitaker's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage and Companionage. 1917. p. 544.
  10. ^ Riddell, Baron George Allardice Riddell (1986). The Riddell diaries, 1908-1923. Athlone Press. p. 10. ISBN 9780485113006.
  11. ^ Brendan John Maartens, Recruitment for the British Armed Forces and Civil Defences: Organising and Producing ‘Advertising’, 1913-63, Ph.D. Thesis, University of Sussex 2013, at p. 69
  12. ^ "Cymru 1914 - Friday 10th of July, 1914". Abergavenny Chronicle. 10 July 1914. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  13. ^ Russell, Thomas (2013-06-26). Commercial Advertising. Routledge Library Editions. p. 256. ISBN 9781136668746. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  14. ^ Simmonds, Alan G. V. (2013). Britain and World War One. Routledge. p. 231. ISBN 9781136629976. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  15. ^ Messinger, Gary S. (1992). British Propaganda and the State in the First World War. Manchester University Press. p. 217. ISBN 9780719030147. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  16. ^ Wormell, Jeremy (2002-09-11). The Management of the National Debt of the United Kingdom 1900-1932. Routledge. p. 135. ISBN 9781134604067. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  17. ^ Farr, Martin (2004-04-30). Reginald McKenna: Financier among Statesmen, 1863–1916. Taylor & Francis. p. 264. ISBN 9781135776602. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  18. ^ "Propaganda at Home (Great Britain and Ireland), International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1)". Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  19. ^ David Brian Hammond (2018), British Army Music in the Interwar Years: Culture, Performance, and Influence Ph.D. thesis The Open University at p. 261
  20. ^ Kennedy), Christopher M. (2010). Genesis of the Rising, 1912–1916: A Transformation of Nationalist Opinion. Peter Lang. p. 90. ISBN 9781433105005. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  21. ^ Toye, Richard; Gottlieb, Julie (2005-11-05). Making Reputations: Power, Persuasion and the Individual in Modern British Politics. I.B.Tauris. p. 36. ISBN 9781850438410. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  22. ^ Turner, E. S. (2012-06-19). Dear Old Blighty. Faber & Faber. p. 37. ISBN 9780571296934. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  23. ^ Pedrini, Pier Paolo (2017-08-07). Propaganda, Persuasion and the Great War: Heredity in the modern sale of products and political ideas. Taylor & Francis. p. 42. ISBN 9781351866187. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  24. ^ Leanne Green, Advertising War: Pictorial Publicity, 1914–1918, Ph.D. thesis Manchester Metropolitan University 2015 at p. 78
  25. ^ "The Annual Register 1919 Series I". Internet Archive. London: Longmans, Green & Co. 1920. pp. Chronicle, 6. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  26. ^ Smith, Adrian (1996). The New Statesman: Portrait of a Political Weekly, 1913-1931. Taylor & Francis. p. 150. ISBN 9780714641690. Retrieved 4 August 2018.
  27. ^ Hyams, Edward; Freeman, John (1963). The New Statesman: The History of the First 50 Years ; 1913-63. Longmans. pp. 81–2.
  28. ^ "www.lucifergolfingsociety.com, The Society". Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  29. ^ "About - The Match Society". Weebly. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  30. ^ Heathorn, Stephen (2016-04-22). Haig and Kitchener in Twentieth-Century Britain: Remembrance, Representation and Appropriation. Routledge. p. 53. ISBN 9781317124122. Retrieved 4 August 2018.
  31. ^ Dod's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, of Great Britain and Ireland: Including All the Titled Classes. S. Low, Marston & Company. 1923. p. 517.
  32. ^ Who was who: A Companion to Who's Who. A. & C. Black. 1962. p. 614.
  33. ^ "Chussex, Tadworth and Walton, Surrey". Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  34. ^ Kelly's (1943). Kelly's Handbook to the Titled, Landed and Official Classes. Kelly's Directories. p. 1101.

hedley, hedley, francis, 1868, 1926, british, publisher, advertising, executive, best, known, world, recruiting, campaign, using, slogan, your, country, needs, born, 1868, 1868jersey, englanddied1926, 1926, aged, nationalitybritishoccupation, publisher, advert. Sir Hedley Francis Le Bas 1868 1926 was a British publisher and advertising executive 1 He is best known for the World War I recruiting campaign using the slogan Your Country Needs You 2 Hedley Le BasBorn 1868 05 19 May 19 1868Jersey EnglandDied1926 1926 00 00 aged 57 58 NationalityBritishOccupation s Publisher Advertising executiveKnown for Your Country Needs You army recruiting campaignNotable workCaxton PublishingSpouseEmma Mary Barnes m 1900 wbr ChildrenHedley Ernest Le Bas 1901 1942 Joan Mary Le Bas 1912 1994 ParentThomas Amice Le Bas Your Country Needs You iconic British recruiting poster with Lord Kitchener the campaign being the work of Hedley Le Bas 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Government work and World War I 3 Later life 4 Family 5 NotesEarly life EditHe was born in Jersey on 19 May 1868 the son of ship s captain Thomas Amice Le Bas and educated there 3 In early life he was a professional soldier serving seven years in the 15th Hussars from age 18 He then went into publishing working for Blackie in Manchester He became involved also in advertising to promote books with the Caxton Publishing Company and Caxton Advertising Agency both founded in 1899 4 5 6 7 In 1910 Le Bas bought out partners T C and E C Jack in Caxton Publishing creating a private limited company 8 He went on to become a director of George Newnes Ltd and C Arthur Pearson Ltd 9 On the board of Caxton Publishing he encountered George Riddell who became a golfing companion and friend for a time 10 Government work and World War I EditThe work of Le Bas on army recruitment followed an October 1913 encounter over a golf match involving George Riddell with J E B Seely the Secretary of State for War 4 It was launched by the Caxton agency in January 1914 with newspaper advertisements and a recruiting film after Caxtons had consulted with Wareham Smith 1874 1938 and Thomas Baron Russell 1865 1931 who had worked as advertising managers respectively with the Daily Mail and The Times 11 Le Bas was a Liberal Party candidate for Watford but stepped down in July 1914 for health reasons 12 On the outbreak of World War I Le Bas was summoned by the British government and he formed a committee of advertising men to promote recruitment 13 The celebrated poster of autumn 1914 was based on an image of Lord Kitchener by Alfred Leete 14 The poster campaign itself was in the hands of the Parliamentary Recruitment Committee Le Bas and his colleague Eric Field from the Caxton Advertising Agency were also creative initiators in the Daddy what did you do in the Great War poster campaign of 1915 15 In 1915 Le Bas was recommended by Lord Northcliffe to Reginald McKenna as someone to promote the first British war loan His view was that politicians of the time had little idea how to exploit the media 16 17 During 1915 his recruiting efforts turned to Ireland and there he drew on his army service in Waterford exploiting in a town with a substantial munitions industry the appeal of military bands 18 19 In February of that year he analysed for David Lloyd George the issue of Irish nationalist volunteers and in particular the Irish Volunteers force in the eyes of the army taken for a Tory he had been told they were not wanted for the political reasons tied up with Irish Home Rule 20 Also in 1915 Le Bas fell out in a very public way with Riddell Both significant in the Liberal Press they were divided by the party faultline separating McKenna from Lloyd George their respective golfing partners in a June 1915 match Matters came to a head with Riddell suing Le Bas over an alleged claim of fraud and stating that Le Bas had tried to blackmail him over the divorce that ended his first marriage 21 Le Bas was knighted in 1916 the first advertising person to be honoured in that way 3 22 He stated a conviction that publicity will find or create anything 23 In that year he became the publicity officer of the National Organising Committee for War Savings NCWS 24 After Kitchener s death at sea in 1916 Le Bas organised the Lord Kitchener National Memorial Fund and in 1917 edited the Lord Kitchener Memorial Book that raised funds for it 6 Later life EditLe Bas brought a libel action against the Daily Mail alleging that in articles and letters the newspaper had published he had been accused of trying to influence the press in corrupt ways He lost the case in April 1919 25 In the early 1920s Le Bas was a director of the New Statesman offering advice to make it financially viable 26 The editor at the time was Clifford Sharp Le Bas discovered that the circulation was understated by a factor of nearly three and proposed raising the advertising rate 27 In 1921 Le Bas founded with friends the Lucifer Golfing Society a gentlemans club that still exists the story runs that the proposed name was the Match Club but such a club already existed and a pun lucifer for match as well as a euphemism for the Devil was incorporated in the title 28 29 He was further involved in the Lord Kitchener National Memorial Fund founding in 1922 an association of former Kitchener Scholars 30 In 1923 Le Bas s residence was given as Great Tylers Reigate 31 At the end of his life he lived at Chussex Walton Heath a 1908 house designed by Edwin Lutyens 32 33 In 1925 he was taking a further interest in the New Statesman working to buy up shares in it on behalf of Ramsay MacDonald who was seeking control Family EditLe Bas married in 1900 Emma Mary Barnes daughter of Joseph Barnes of Dorchester They had a son Hedley Ernest 1901 1942 and a daughter Joan Mary 1912 1994 3 34 Notes Edit Webb 2008 10 14 The Letters of Sidney and Beatrice Webb Volume 3 Pilgrimage 1912 1947 Cambridge University Press p 49 ISBN 9780521083980 Retrieved 3 August 2018 a b Toye Richard Gottlieb Julie 2005 11 05 Making Reputations Power Persuasion and the Individual in Modern British Politics I B Tauris p 36 ISBN 9781850438410 Retrieved 3 August 2018 a b c Dod s Peerage Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland Including All the Titled Classes S Low Marston amp Company 1917 p 517 a b Messinger Gary S 1992 British Propaganda and the State in the First World War Manchester University Press p 214 ISBN 9780719030147 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Gotter Christian 2016 01 01 Die Macht der Wirkungsannahmen Medienarbeit des britischen und deutschen Militars in der ersten Halfte des 20 Jahrhunderts in German De Gruyter p 60 ISBN 9783110452204 Retrieved 3 August 2018 a b Annual Register J Dodsley 1927 p 126 Wormell Jeremy 2002 09 11 The Management of the National Debt of the United Kingdom 1900 1932 Routledge p 754 ISBN 9781134604074 Retrieved 3 August 2018 The Publisher 1910 p 714 Whitaker s Peerage Baronetage Knightage and Companionage 1917 p 544 Riddell Baron George Allardice Riddell 1986 The Riddell diaries 1908 1923 Athlone Press p 10 ISBN 9780485113006 Brendan John Maartens Recruitment for the British Armed Forces and Civil Defences Organising and Producing Advertising 1913 63 Ph D Thesis University of Sussex 2013 at p 69 Cymru 1914 Friday 10th of July 1914 Abergavenny Chronicle 10 July 1914 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Russell Thomas 2013 06 26 Commercial Advertising Routledge Library Editions p 256 ISBN 9781136668746 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Simmonds Alan G V 2013 Britain and World War One Routledge p 231 ISBN 9781136629976 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Messinger Gary S 1992 British Propaganda and the State in the First World War Manchester University Press p 217 ISBN 9780719030147 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Wormell Jeremy 2002 09 11 The Management of the National Debt of the United Kingdom 1900 1932 Routledge p 135 ISBN 9781134604067 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Farr Martin 2004 04 30 Reginald McKenna Financier among Statesmen 1863 1916 Taylor amp Francis p 264 ISBN 9781135776602 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Propaganda at Home Great Britain and Ireland International Encyclopedia of the First World War WW1 Retrieved 3 August 2018 David Brian Hammond 2018 British Army Music in the Interwar Years Culture Performance and Influence Ph D thesis The Open University at p 261 Kennedy Christopher M 2010 Genesis of the Rising 1912 1916 A Transformation of Nationalist Opinion Peter Lang p 90 ISBN 9781433105005 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Toye Richard Gottlieb Julie 2005 11 05 Making Reputations Power Persuasion and the Individual in Modern British Politics I B Tauris p 36 ISBN 9781850438410 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Turner E S 2012 06 19 Dear Old Blighty Faber amp Faber p 37 ISBN 9780571296934 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Pedrini Pier Paolo 2017 08 07 Propaganda Persuasion and the Great War Heredity in the modern sale of products and political ideas Taylor amp Francis p 42 ISBN 9781351866187 Retrieved 3 August 2018 Leanne Green Advertising War Pictorial Publicity 1914 1918 Ph D thesis Manchester Metropolitan University 2015 at p 78 The Annual Register 1919 Series I Internet Archive London Longmans Green amp Co 1920 pp Chronicle 6 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Smith Adrian 1996 The New Statesman Portrait of a Political Weekly 1913 1931 Taylor amp Francis p 150 ISBN 9780714641690 Retrieved 4 August 2018 Hyams Edward Freeman John 1963 The New Statesman The History of the First 50 Years 1913 63 Longmans pp 81 2 www lucifergolfingsociety com The Society Retrieved 6 August 2018 About The Match Society Weebly Retrieved 6 August 2018 Heathorn Stephen 2016 04 22 Haig and Kitchener in Twentieth Century Britain Remembrance Representation and Appropriation Routledge p 53 ISBN 9781317124122 Retrieved 4 August 2018 Dod s Peerage Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland Including All the Titled Classes S Low Marston amp Company 1923 p 517 Who was who A Companion to Who s Who A amp C Black 1962 p 614 Chussex Tadworth and Walton Surrey Retrieved 6 August 2018 Kelly s 1943 Kelly s Handbook to the Titled Landed and Official Classes Kelly s Directories p 1101 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hedley Le Bas amp oldid 1098129253, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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