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John Simon, 1st Viscount Simon

John Allsebrook Simon, 1st Viscount Simon, GCSI, GCVO, OBE, PC (28 February 1873 – 11 January 1954), was a British politician who held senior Cabinet posts from the beginning of the First World War to the end of the Second World War. He is one of only three people to have served as Home Secretary, Foreign Secretary and Chancellor of the Exchequer, the others being Rab Butler and James Callaghan.

The Viscount Simon
Simon in 1931
Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain
In office
10 May 1940 – 27 July 1945
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded byThe Viscount Caldecote
Succeeded byThe Viscount Jowitt
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
28 May 1937 – 10 May 1940
Prime MinisterNeville Chamberlain
Preceded byNeville Chamberlain
Succeeded bySir Kingsley Wood
Foreign Secretary
In office
5 November 1931 – 7 June 1935
Prime MinisterRamsay MacDonald
Preceded byThe Marquess of Reading
Succeeded bySir Samuel Hoare
Home Secretary
In office
7 June 1935 – 28 May 1937
Prime MinisterStanley Baldwin
Preceded bySir John Gilmour
Succeeded bySir Samuel Hoare
In office
27 May 1915 – 12 January 1916
Prime MinisterH. H. Asquith
Preceded byReginald McKenna
Succeeded byHerbert Samuel
Attorney General for England and Wales
In office
19 October 1913 – 25 May 1915
Prime MinisterH. H. Asquith
Preceded bySir Rufus Isaacs
Succeeded bySir Edward Carson
Solicitor General for England and Wales
In office
7 October 1910 – 19 October 1913
Prime MinisterH. H. Asquith
Preceded bySir Rufus Isaacs
Succeeded bySir Stanley Buckmaster
Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
In office
20 May 1940 – 11 January 1954
Hereditary peerage
Preceded byPeerage created
Succeeded byThe 2nd Viscount Simon
Member of Parliament
for Spen Valley
In office
15 November 1922 – 1 June 1940
Preceded byTom Myers
Succeeded byWilliam Woolley
Member of Parliament
for Walthamstow
In office
8 February 1906 – 14 December 1918
Preceded byDavid John Morgan
Succeeded bySeat abolished
Personal details
Born
John Allsebrook Simon

(1873-02-28)28 February 1873
Moss Side, Manchester, Lancashire, England
Died11 January 1954(1954-01-11) (aged 80)
Westminster, London, England
Political partyLiberal Party
Other political
affiliations
National Liberal Party
Spouses
Alma materWadham College, Oxford

He also served as Lord Chancellor, the most senior position in the British legal system. Beginning his career as a Liberal (identified initially with the left wing[1] but later with the right wing of the party),[2] he joined the National Government in 1931, creating the Liberal National Party in the process. At the end of his career, he was essentially a Conservative.

Background and education

Simon was born in a terraced house on Moss Side, Manchester, the eldest child and only son[3][4] of Edwin Simon (1843–1920) and wife Fanny Allsebrook (1846–1936).[3] His father was a Congregationalist minister, like three of his five brothers, and was pastor of Zion Chapel in Hulme, Manchester. His mother was a farmer's daughter and a descendant of Sir Richard Pole and his wife, Margaret Pole, Countess of Salisbury.[3]

Congregational ministers were expected to move about the country.[5] Simon was educated at King Edward's School, Bath, as his father was President of Somerset Congregational Union.[3] He was then a scholar of Fettes College in Edinburgh,[5][3] where he was Head of School and won many prizes.[6]

He failed to win a scholarship to Balliol College, Oxford, but won an open scholarship to Wadham College, Oxford.[3][6] He arrived at Wadham in 1892.[7] He achieved Seconds in Mathematics and Classical Moderations.[7] He spoke in support of Herbert Samuel for South Oxfordshire in the 1895 election[7] and, after two terms as Junior Treasurer, became President of the Oxford Union in Hilary Term 1896,[3][7] Simon won the Barstow Law Scholarship and graduated with a first in Greats in 1896.[3][7]

Simon's attendance at Wadham overlapped with those of F. E. Smith, the cricketer C. B. Fry[3] and the journalist Francis Hirst.[7] Smith, Fry and Simon played in the Wadham Rugby XV together.[8][7] Simon and Smith began a rivalry that lasted throughout their legal and political careers over the next 30 years. Simon was, in David Dutton's view, a finer scholar than Smith. Although Smith thought Simon pompous, Simon, in the words of a contemporary, thought that Smith excelled at "the cheap score".[7] A famous (although clearly untrue) malicious story had it that Smith and Simon had tossed a coin to decide which party to join.[9]

Simon was briefly a trainee leader writer for the Manchester Guardian under C. P. Scott.[8] Simon shared lodgings with Leo Amery while both were studying for the All Souls Fellowship (both were successful).[7] He became a Fellow of All Souls in 1897.[3]

Simon left Oxford at the end of 1898[3] and was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1899.[3] He was a pupil of A. J. Ram and then of Sir Reginald Acland.[3] Like many barristers, his career got off to a slow start: he earned a mere £27 in his first year at the bar.[8] At first, he earned some extra money by coaching candidates for the bar exams.[7] As a barrister, he relied on logic and reason rather than oratory and histrionics, and he excelled at simplifying complex issues.[3] He was a brilliant advocate of complex cases before judges although rather less so before juries.[10] Some of his work was done on the Western Circuit at Bristol. He worked exceptionally hard, often preparing his cases through the night several times a week. His initial lack of connections made his eventual success at the Bar all the more impressive.[7]

Simon was widowed in 1902 and took solace in his work. He became a successful lawyer, and in 1903, he acted for the British government in the Alaska boundary dispute.[11] Even three years after his wife's death, he spent Christmas Day 1905 alone by walking aimlessly in France.[3]

Early political career

Simon entered the House of Commons as a Liberal Member of Parliament (MP) for Walthamstow at the 1906 general election. In 1908, he became a KC (senior barrister)[3] at the same time as F. E. Smith.[6] Simon annoyed Smith by not telling his rival in advance that he was applying for silk.[7]

In 1909, Simon spoke out strongly in parliament in support of David Lloyd George's progressive "People's Budget".[12] He entered the government on 7 October 1910 as solicitor-general,[13] succeeding Rufus Isaacs, and was knighted later that month,[14] as was then usual for government law officers (Asquith brushed aside his objections).[15] At 37, he was the youngest solicitor-general since the 1830s.[3] In February 1911, he successfully prosecuted Edward Mylius for criminal libel for claiming that King George V was a bigamist.[3] As was then required by the law, he fought a by-election after his appointment.[15]

He was honoured with appointment as a KCVO in 1911.[3] Asquith referred to him as "the Impeccable" for his intellectual self-assurance,[3] but after a series of social encounters, he wrote that "The Impeccable" was becoming "The Inevitable".[16]

Along with Isaacs, Simon represented the Board of Trade at the public inquiry into the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912; their close questioning of witnesses helped to prepare the way for improved maritime safety measures.[17] Unusually for a government law officer, he was active in partisan political debate.[15] When F. E. Smith first spoke from the Conservative front bench in 1912, Simon was put up next to oppose his old rival.[7] He was promoted on 19 October 1913 to attorney-general,[3][18] again succeeding Isaacs. Unusually for an attorney-general, he was made a full member of Cabinet, as Isaacs had been, rather than simply being invited to attend when he was required. He was already being tipped as a potential future Liberal prime minister.[3]

He was the leader of the (unsuccessful) cabinet rebels against Winston Churchill's 1914 naval estimates. Asquith thought that Simon had organised "a conclave of malcontents" (Lloyd George, Reginald McKenna, Samuel, Charles Hobhouse and Beauchamp). He wrote to Asquith that the "loss of WC, though regrettable, is not by any means the splitting of the party". Lloyd George referred to Simon as "a kind of Robespierre".[19]

Simon contemplated resigning in protest at the declaration of war in August 1914 but, in the end, changed his mind.[3] He was accused of hypocrisy even though his position was not actually very different from that of Lloyd George.[5] He remained in the Cabinet after Asquith reminded him of his public duty and hinted at promotion. He damaged himself in the eyes of Hobhouse (postmaster-general), Charles Masterman and the journalist C. P. Scott. Roy Jenkins believed that Simon was genuinely opposed to war.[20]

Early in 1915, Asquith rated Simon as "equal seventh" in his score list of the Cabinet, after his "malaise of last autumn".[20]

 
Simon circa 1916

First World War

On 25 May 1915, Simon became Home Secretary in Asquith's new coalition government. He declined an offer of the job of Lord Chancellor, which would have meant going to the Lords and restricting his active political career thereafter.[3] As home secretary, he satisfied nobody. He tried to defend the Union of Democratic Control against Edward Carson's attempt to prosecute it. However, he tried to ban The Times and the Daily Mail for criticising the government's conduct of the war but failed to obtain Cabinet support.[21]

He resigned in January 1916 in protest against the introduction of conscription of single men, which he thought a breach of Liberal principles.[3] McKenna and Walter Runciman also opposed conscription but for different reasons: they thought that it would weaken British industry and wanted Britain to concentrate her war effort on the Royal Navy and supporting the other Allies with finance.[21] In his memoirs, Simon would admit that his resignation from the Home Office had been a mistake.[22]

After Asquith's fall in December 1916, Simon remained in opposition as an Asquithian Liberal.[22]

Simon proved his patriotism by serving as an officer on Trenchard's staff in the Royal Flying Corps[3] for about a year, starting in the summer of 1917.[22] His duties included purchasing supplies in Paris, where he married his second wife towards the end of 1917.[23] Amidst questions as to whether it was appropriate for a serving officer to do so, Simon spoke in Trenchard's defence in Parliament when Trenchard resigned as Chief of Air Staff after Trenchard had fallen out with the President of the Air Council Lord Rothermere, who soon resigned. However, Simon was attacked in the Northcliffe Press (Northcliffe was Rothermere's brother).[24]

Simon's Walthamstow constituency was split up at the "Coupon Election" in 1918 and he was defeated at the new Walthamstow East division[3][11] by a margin of more than 4,000 votes.[22]

1920s

Out of Parliament

In 1919, he attempted to return to Parliament at the Spen Valley by-election. Lloyd George put up a coalition Liberal candidate in Spen Valley to keep Simon out[3] and was active behind the scenes trying to see him defeated.[25]

Although the Coalition Liberals, who had formerly held the seat, were pushed into third place, Simon came second; in the view of Maurice Cowling (The Impact of Labour 1920-4), his defeat by Labour marked the point at which Labour began to be seen as a serious threat by the older political parties.[26]

Deputy leader of Liberals

In the early 1920s, he practised successfully at the bar before being elected for Spen Valley at the general election in 1922, and from 1922 to 1924, he served as deputy leader of the Liberal Party (under Asquith).[27][28] In the early 1920s, he spoke in the House of Commons about socialism, the League of Nations, unemployment and Ireland. He may well have hoped to succeed Asquith as Liberal leader. He retired temporarily from the Bar around then.[29]

In October 1924, Simon moved the amendment that brought down the first Labour government. At that year's general election, the Conservatives were returned to power, and the Liberals were reduced to a rump of just over 40 MPs. Although Asquith, who had lost his seat, remained leader of the party, Lloyd George was elected chairman of the Liberal MPs by 29 votes to 9. Simon abstained in the vote. By this time he was increasingly anti-socialist and quite friendly to the Conservative leader Stanley Baldwin and clashed increasingly with Lloyd George. He stood down as deputy leader and returned to the Bar.[3][29]

General strike and Simon Commission

Unlike Lloyd George, Simon opposed the 1926 general strike. On 6 May, the fourth day of the strike, he declared in the House of Commons that the strike was illegal[3] and argued that it was not entitled to the legal privileges of the Trade Disputes Act 1906 and that the union bosses would be "liable to the utmost farthing" in damages for the harm that they inflicted on businesses and for inciting the men to break their contracts of employment. Simon was highly respected as an authority on the law but was neither popular nor seen as a political leader.[30]

Simon was then one of the highest-paid barristers of his generation and was believed to earn between £36,000 and £70,000 per annum (equivalent to £4,300,000 in 2021).[22][31] It seemed for a while that he might abandon politics altogether.[3] Simon spoke for Newfoundland in the Labrador boundary dispute with Canada before he announced his permanent retirement from the Bar.[32]

From 1927 to 1931, he chaired the Indian Constitutional Development Committee or the Indian Statutory Commission, known as the Simon Commission, on the constitution of India.[33][3]

Upon the commission's arrival in Bombay in February 1928, it was immediately met with a hartal and protestors holding black flags and banners reading "Simon Go Back" (coined by Yusuf Meherally) involving prominent Indian political leaders such as Lala Lajpat Rai and Tanguturi Prakasam. The protests erupted due to the lack of Indian representation on the commission, with the group composed of seven all-British Members of Parliament.[34]

His personality was already something of an issue: Neville Chamberlain wrote of him to the Viceroy of India Lord Irwin (12 August 1928): "I am always trying to like him, and believing I shall succeed when something crops up to put me off".[35][3] Dutton describes Simon's eventual report as a "lucid exposition of the problems of the subcontinent in all their complexity". However, Simon had been hampered by the inquiry's terms of reference (no Indians had been included on the committee), and his conclusions were overshadowed by the Irwin Declaration of October 1929, which Simon opposed, which promised India eventual dominion status.[33][3] Simon was appointed GCSI 1930.[3]

Liberal National split and moving towards Conservatives

Before serving on the committee, Simon had obtained a guarantee that he would not be opposed by a Conservative candidate at Spen Valley at the 1929 general election, and, indeed he was never again opposed by a Conservative.[36] During the late 1920s and especially during the 1929-31 Parliament, in which Labour had no majority but continued in office with the help of the Liberals, Simon was seen as the leader of the minority of Liberal MPs who disliked Lloyd George's inclination to support Labour, rather than the Conservatives. Simon still supported free trade during the 1929-31 Parliament.[3]

In 1930, Simon headed the official inquiry into the R101 airship disaster.[3]

In June 1931, before the formation of the National Government, Simon resigned the Liberal whip. In September, Simon and his 30-or-so followers became the Liberal Nationals (later renamed the "National Liberals") and increasingly aligned themselves with the Conservatives for practical purposes.[3][33] Simon was accused by Lloyd George of leaving "the slime of hypocrisy" as he crossed the floor (on another occasion, Lloyd George is said to have commented that he had "sat on the fence so long the iron has entered into his soul", but this quote is more difficult to verify).[16]

1930s: National Government

Foreign Secretary

Simon was not initially included in Ramsay MacDonald's National Government, which was formed in August 1931. Simon offered to give up his seat at Spen Valley to MacDonald if the latter had trouble holding Seaham (MacDonald held the seat in 1931 but lost it in 1935).[37] On 5 November 1931, Simon was appointed Foreign Secretary when the National Government was reconstituted.[37][3] The appointment was at first greeted with acclaim.[3] Simon's Liberal Nationals continued to support protectionism and Ramsay MacDonald's National Government after the departure of the mainstream Liberals, led by Herbert Samuel, who left the government in 1932 and formally went into Opposition in November 1933.[3]

Simon's tenure of office saw a number of important events in foreign policy, including the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, which had begun in September 1931, before he had taken office. Simon attracted particular opprobrium for his speech to the General Assembly of the League of Nations at Geneva on 7 December 1932 in which he failed to denounce Japan unequivocally.[3][38] Thereafter, Simon was known as the "Man of Manchukuo" and was compared unfavourably to the young Anthony Eden, who was popular at Geneva.[39]

At the same time, Adolf Hitler was coming to power in Germany in January 1933. Hitler immediately withdrew Germany from the League of Nations and announced a programme of rearmament, initially to give Germany armed forces commensurate with France and other powers. Simon did not foresee the sheer scale of Hitler's ambitions, but Dutton pointed out, the same was then true for many others.[3]

Simon's term of office also saw the failure of the World Disarmament Conference (1932-1934). His contribution was not entirely in vain since he proposed qualitative (seeking to limit or ban certain types of weapon), rather than quantitative (simple numbers of weapons), disarmament.[3]

Simon does not appear to have been considered for the post of Chancellor of Oxford University in succession to Viscount Grey in 1933 since Simon was then at the depth of his unpopularity as Foreign Secretary. Lord Irwin was elected, and since he lived until 1959, the job did not fall vacant again in Simon's lifetime.[40]

There was talk of Neville Chamberlain, who dominated the government's domestic policy, becoming Foreign Secretary, but that would have been intolerable to MacDonald, who took a keen interest in foreign affairs and wanted a leading non-Conservative in that role. In 1933 and late 1934, Simon was being criticised by both Austen and Neville Chamberlain as well as by Eden, Lloyd George, Nancy Astor, David Margesson, Vincent Massey, Runciman, Jan Smuts and Churchill.[37]

Simon accompanied MacDonald to negotiate the Stresa Front with France and Italy in April 1935, but it was MacDonald who took the lead in the negotiations.[39] Simon himself did not think that Stresa would stop German rearmament but thought that it might be a useful deterrent against territorial aggression by Hitler.[41] The first stirrings of Italian aggression towards Abyssinia (now Ethiopia) were also then seen. During Simon's tenure of the Foreign Office, British defence strength was at its lowest point of the interwar period, which severely limited his freedom of action.[3]

Even Simon's colleagues thought that he had been a disastrous Foreign Secretary, "the worst since Æthelred the Unready", as one wag put it. He was better at analysing a problem than at concluding and acting.[3] Jenkins commented that he was a bad Foreign Secretary in the view of his contemporaries and ever since and concurs that he was better at analysing than solving. Neville Chamberlain thought he always sounded as though he was speaking from a brief.[42][37] Simon's officials despaired of him since he had few thoughts of his own, solutions were imposed on him by others and he defended them only weakly.[43] Leo Amery was a rare defender of Simon's record: in 1937, he recorded that Simon "really had been a sound foreign minister – and Stresa marked the nearest Europe has been to peace since 1914".[44]

Home Secretary

Simon served as Home Secretary (in Stanley Baldwin's Third Government) from 7 June 1935 to 28 May 1937. That position was in Dutton's view better suited to his abilities than the Foreign Office.[3][45] He also became Deputy Leader of the House of Commons on the understanding that the latter position would be given to Neville Chamberlain after the election (in the event, it was not).[46] In 1935, Simon was the last Home Secretary to attend a royal birth (of the present Duke of Kent).[46] He passed the Public Order Act 1936, restricting the activities of Oswald Mosley's Blackshirts. He also played a key role behind the scenes in the 1936 Abdication Crisis.[3] He was one of the signatories to the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1936.[47] He also introduced the Factories Act 1937.[46]

Simon was devoted to his mother[43] and wrote a well-received Portrait of My Mother in 1936 after her death.[3]

Chancellor of the Exchequer

Peace

In 1937, Neville Chamberlain succeeded Baldwin as prime minister. Simon succeeded Chamberlain as Chancellor of the Exchequer and was raised to GCVO in 1937. As Chancellor, he tried to keep arms spending as low as possible in the belief that a strong economy was the "fourth arm of defence".[3] In 1937, he presented a finance bill that was based on the budget that Chamberlain had drawn up before being promoted.[48]

In 1938, public expenditure passed the previously unthinkable level of £1,000m for the first time. In the spring 1938 budget, Simon raised the income tax from 5s to 5s 6d and increased duties on tea and petrol.[48]

Simon had become a close political ally of Chamberlain[3] and flattered him a great deal. In the autumn of 1938, he led the Cabinet to Heston Airport to wish him God speed on his flight to meet Hitler, and he helped to persuade Chamberlain to make the "high" case for Munich: that he had achieved a lasting peace, rather than that he had only limited potential damage.[49] He retained the support of Chamberlain until around the middle of 1939.[48]

In the spring 1939 budget, income tax was unchanged, and the surtax was increased, as were indirect taxes on cars, sugar and tobacco. It was not a war budget even though Hitler had already broken the Munich Accords by occupying Prague.[48]

War

On 2 September 1939, Simon led a deputation of ministers to see Chamberlain to insist for Britain to honour her guarantee to Poland and go to war if Hitler did not withdraw. Simon became a member of the small War Cabinet.[3]

On the outbreak of war, sterling was devalued, with very little attention, from $4.89 to $4.03.[50] At the emergency budget of September 1939, public expenditure had passed £2,000m; income tax was increased from 5s 6d (27.5%) to 7s 6d (37.5%); duties on alcohol, petrol and sugar were hiked; and a 60% tax on excess profits was introduced.[48]

Simon's political position weakened as he came to be seen as a symbol of foot-dragging and the lack of commitment to total war. Along with Labour's dislike of Chamberlain, he was used as an excuse by the opposition parties for not joining the government on the outbreak of war. Archibald Sinclair, the leader of the "official" Liberal Party, said that for over seven years, Simon had been "the evil genius of British foreign policy". Hugh Dalton and Clement Attlee were very critical of Simon, as were many government backbenchers.[50]

Chamberlain privately told colleagues that he found Simon "very much deteriorated". Simon's position weakened after Churchill rejoined the Cabinet on the outbreak of war and got on surprisingly well with Chamberlain, who toyed with the idea of replacing Simon with former Chancellor Reginald McKenna (then aged 76) or Lord Stamp, the chairman of the LMS Railway who had a secret meeting at Downing Street about the position. Even Captain Margesson, the Chief Whip, fancied his chances for the position.[50]

Simon's last budget, in April 1940, saw public spending pass £2,700m, 46% of which was paid for from taxation and the rest from borrowing.[48] Simon's April 1940 budget kept income tax at 7s 6d; a Punch cartoon expressed a widely-held view that it should have been increased to 10s (50%). Tax allowances were increased. Postal charges were increased, as were charges on tobacco, matches and alcohol. The purchase tax, an ancestor of today's value-added tax (VAT), was introduced.[50]

In April 1940, he rejected John Maynard Keynes' idea of a forced loan, a tax disguised as a compulsory purchase of government securities. Keynes wrote a coruscating letter of rebuke to The Times. Simon found himself criticised, from opposite ends of the spectrum, by Leo Amery and Aneurin Bevan.[51]

Lord Chancellor

In May 1940, following the Norway Debate, Simon urged Chamberlain to stand firm as Prime Minister although Simon offered to resign and take Samuel Hoare with him.[51] By 1940, Simon, along with his successor as Foreign Secretary, Hoare, had come to be seen as one of the "Guilty Men" responsible for appeasement of the dictators, and like Hoare, Simon was not regarded as acceptable in the War Cabinet of Churchill's new coalition. Hugh Dalton thought Simon "the snakiest of the lot".[16]

Simon became Lord Chancellor in Churchill's government but without a place on the War Cabinet. Attlee commented that he "will be quite innocuous" in the role.[51][52] On 13 May 1940, he was created Viscount Simon, of Stackpole Elidor in the County of Pembroke, a village from which his father traced descent.[3]

In Dutton's view, of all the senior positions which he held, that was the one for which he was most suited. As Lord Chancellor, he delivered important judgements on the damages due for death caused by negligence and on how the judge ought to direct the jury in a murder trial if a possible defence of manslaughter arose.[3] In 1943 alone, he delivered 43 major judgements on complex cases. RVF Heuston (Lives of the Lord Chancellors) described him as a "superb" Lord Chancellor. Jenkins comments that it is even more impressive in that many senior judges had over 20 years' experience at that level, whereas Simon had been retired from the law since 1928.[53]

Simon interrogated Rudolf Hess, who had flown to Scotland,[3][53] and also chaired the Royal Commission on the Birthrate.[53]

In May 1945, after the end of the wartime coalition, Simon continued as Lord Chancellor but was not included in the Cabinet of the short-lived Churchill caretaker ministry. After Churchill's defeat in the 1945 general election, Simon never held office again.[51]

Later life

Although he had won plaudits for his legal skills as Lord Chancellor, Clement Attlee declined to appoint him to the British delegation at the Nuremberg War Trials and told him bluntly in a letter that Simon's role in the prewar governments made it unwise.[53] Simon remained active in the House of Lords and as a senior judge on the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. He wrote a well-regarded practitioners' text Simon on Income Tax in 1948.[3]

In 1948, Simon succeeded Lord Sankey as High Steward of Oxford University.[3] The position is often held by a distinguished Oxonian lawyer. Relations with his nearly-alcoholic wife were somewhat strained, and he increasingly spent his weekends at All Souls,[40] of which he was Senior Fellow.[7]

Simon was a vigorous campaigner against socialism, across the country in the general elections of 1945, 1950 and 1951.[40] Churchill blocked Simon, who had stepped down as leader of the National Liberals in 1940, from joining the Conservative Party.[3] Churchill was keen to lend Conservative support to the (official) Liberals, including his old friend Lady Violet Bonham Carter, but blocked a full merger between the Conservatives and the National Liberals although a constituency-level merger was negotiated with the Conservative Party chairman Lord Woolton in 1947 (thereafter, the National Liberals were increasingly absorbed into the Conservatives for practical purposes until they fully merged in 1968).[40]

Although Simon was still physically and mentally vigorous (aged 78) when the Conservatives returned to power in 1951, Churchill offered him neither a return to the Woolsack nor any other office.[3] In 1952, Simon published his memoirs, Retrospect.[3] The quote "I so very tire of politics. The early death of too many a great man is attributed to her touch" is from Simon's memoir. Harold Nicolson reviewed the book as describing the "nectarines and peaches of office" as if they were "a bag of prunes".[10]

Simon died from a stroke on 11 January 1954. He was an atheist and was cremated in his Oxford robes.[3] His estate was valued for probate at £93,006 12s (equivalent to £2,700,000 in 2021).[54][3][31] Despite his huge earnings at the Bar, he was not particularly greedy for money and was generous to All Souls, to junior barristers and to the children of friends.[43] His personal papers are preserved in the Bodleian Library, Oxford.[55]

Private life and personality

 
Dame Kathleen Simon, Viscountess Simon (17 February 1920)

Simon married Ethel Mary Venables, a niece of the historian J. R. Green, on 24 May 1899 in Headington, Oxfordshire. They had three children: Margaret (born 1900, who later married Geoffrey Edwards), Joan (born 1901, who later married John Bickford-Smith) and John Gilbert, 2nd Viscount Simon (1902–1993). Ethel died soon after the birth of their son Gilbert, in September 1902.[3]

There are some suggestions that his first wife's death may have been caused by misguided use of homeopathic medicines, which added to Simon's guilt. In Jenkins' view, widowerhood, although common for politicians of the era, may have affected Simon's cold personality. He later apparently tried to persuade Margaret Greville, the hostess of Polesden Lacey, to marry him.[8] Greville later claimed that he had told her that he would marry the next woman he met.[56]

In 1917, in Paris, Simon married the abolition activist Kathleen Manning (1863/64–1955), a widow with one adult son, who had for a while been governess to his children.[3] Her social gaucheness and inability to play the part of a great lady caused embarrassment on the Simon Commission in the late 1920s, and Neville Chamberlain found her "a sore trial". She had increasing health problems and "dr[ank] to excess" as she grew older.[56] Jenkins wrote that she was tactless and, by the late 1930s, had become a virtual alcoholic but that Simon treated her with "tolerance and kindness".[15] In 1938, Simon stepped down at Spen Valley and was selected as candidate for Great Yarmouth since he needed a seat nearer London for the sake of his wife's health (in the event, he never stood for his new seat but remained MP for Spen Valley until his elevation to the Lords in 1940).[56]

Simon bought Fritwell Manor in Oxfordshire, in 1911 and lived there until 1933.[57] He was an avid chess player and frequently sought for as a dignitary to open major chess tournaments in England.[58]

Simon was neither liked nor trusted, and he was never seriously considered for prime minister.[59] He possessed an unfortunately chilly manner, and from at least 1914 onwards, he had difficulty in conveying an impression that he was acting from honourable motives. His awkward attempts to strike up friendships with his colleagues (asking his Cabinet colleagues to call him "Jack": only J. H. Thomas did so, and Neville Chamberlain settled on "John") often fell flat.[60] Jenkins likens him to the nursery rhyme character Dr Fell.[61] In the 1930s, his reputation sank particularly low. Although Simon's athletic build and good looks were remarked on even into his old age, the cartoonist David Low portrayed him with, in Low's own words, a "sinuous writhing body" to reflect his "disposition to subtle compromise".[3] Harold Nicolson, after Simon had grabbed his arm from behind to talk to him (19 October 1944), wrote pithily "God what a toad and a worm Simon is!"[16] Another anecdote, from the late 1940s, tells how the socialist intellectual G. D. H. Cole got into a third-class compartment on the train back from Oxford to London to break off conversation with Simon; to his dismay, Simon followed suit, only for both men to produce first-class tickets when the inspector did his rounds.[35]

Cases

House of Lords

Judicial Committee of the Privy Council

  • 'Abitibi Power and Paper Company Limited v. Montreal Trust Company, [1943] AC 536, [1943] UKPC 37 (PC – Canada): Constitution Act, 1867, s. 92(13) – provincial power to enact specific moratorium legislation
  • Atlantic Smoke Shops Limited v Conlon, [1943] AC 550, [1943] UKPC 44 (PC – Canada): Constitution Act, 1867, s. 92(2) – provincial power to impose sales taxes
  • The Attorney General of Ontario and others v The Canada Temperance Foundation and others, [1946] AC 193, [1946] UKPC 2 (PC – Canada): Constitution Act, 1867, s. 91, "peace, order and good government" – federal power to enact laws relating to matters of national concern

References

  1. ^ Keith Laybourn (2002). Fifty Key Figures in Twentieth-century British Politics. p. 209. ISBN 9780415226769. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  2. ^ Jennings, Ivor (1961). Party Politics: Volume 2: The Growth of Parties. Cambridge University Press. p. 268. ISBN 9780521137942. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm Dutton, D. J. (2011) [2004]. "Simon, John Allsebrook, first Viscount Simon (1873–1954)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36098. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 369, states that he was an only child.
  5. ^ a b c Jenkins 1999, p. 369.
  6. ^ a b c Jenkins 1999, p. 370.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dutton 1992, pp. 7–9.
  8. ^ a b c d Jenkins 1999, p. 371.
  9. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 370. Jenkins states that Smith and Simon both started at Wadham on the same day in 1891, which is not supported by Dutton's more detailed biography.
  10. ^ a b Jenkins 1999, p. 367.
  11. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). "Simon, Sir John Allsebrook" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 32 (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company. pp. 498–499.
  12. ^ "Finance Bill. (Hansard, 4 November 1909)". Hansard.millbanksystems.com. from the original on 15 September 2015. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  13. ^ "No. 28424". The London Gazette. 4 October 1910. p. 7247.
  14. ^ "No. 28429". The London Gazette. 28 October 1910. p. 7611.
  15. ^ a b c d Jenkins 1999, p. 372.
  16. ^ a b c d Jenkins 1999, p. 366.
  17. ^ Dutton 1992, p. 17.
  18. ^ "No. 28766". The London Gazette. 21 October 1913. p. 7336.
  19. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 373.
  20. ^ a b Jenkins 1999, p. 374.
  21. ^ a b Jenkins 1999, p. 375.
  22. ^ a b c d e Jenkins 1999, p. 376.
  23. ^ Dutton 1992, p. 45.
  24. ^ Dutton 1992, p. 46. Dutton states erroneously that Trenchard resigned as Commander of the Royal Flying Corps, the position which Trenchard had held on the Western Front in 1916 to 1917.
  25. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 377.
  26. ^ Cowling, Maurice (1971). The Impact of Labour 1920-1924: The Beginning of Modern British Politics (Cambridge Studies in the History and Theory of Politics). Cambridge University Press.
  27. ^ "London Correspondence 25 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine", Glasgow Herald, 24 November 1922, p. 9.
  28. ^ Dutton 1992, p. 59.
  29. ^ a b Jenkins 1999, p. 378.
  30. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 379.
  31. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 31 March 2016. Retrieved 22 October 2017.
  32. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 380.
  33. ^ a b c Jenkins 1999, p. 381.
  34. ^ Tarique, Mohammad (2008). Modern Indian History. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-066030-4.
  35. ^ a b Jenkins, Roy The Chancellors (London: Macmillan, 1998), pp. 366–67.
  36. ^ Jenkins 1999, pp. 377, 381.
  37. ^ a b c d Jenkins 1999, p. 382.
  38. ^ Douglas Reed, All Our Tomorrows (1942), p. 62: Geneva, 1931, "Sir John Simon congratulated by the Japanese emissary for presentation of Japan's case against China".
  39. ^ a b Jenkins 1999, p. 384.
  40. ^ a b c d Jenkins 1999, p. 392.
  41. ^ Dutton 1992, p. 220.
  42. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 383.
  43. ^ a b c Jenkins 1999, p. 368.
  44. ^ Dutton 1992, p. 207.
  45. ^ Rose, Kenneth (1983). King George V. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 402. ISBN 0-297-78245-2. OCLC 9909629. It was thus that on the morning of 20 January 1936, three members of the Privy Council came down to Sandringham... MacDonald, the Lord President of the Council; Hailsham, the Lord Chancellor; and Simon, the Home Secretary.
  46. ^ a b c Jenkins 1999, p. 385.
  47. ^ "Historic Anglo-Egyptian treaty signed in London – archive, 1936". Guardian. 27 August 2021. from the original on 27 August 2021. Retrieved 28 August 2021.
  48. ^ a b c d e f Jenkins 1999, p. 388.
  49. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 386.
  50. ^ a b c d Jenkins 1999, p. 389.
  51. ^ a b c d Jenkins 1999, p. 390.
  52. ^ At the time, besides being Minister in charge of the judiciary, the Lord Chancellor was also Speaker of the House of Lords and was himself the most senior judge. He sat as one of the Law Lords, the senior judges who carried out the judicial functions of the House of Lords. They were a predecessor to today's Supreme Court of the United Kingdom.
  53. ^ a b c d Jenkins 1999, p. 391.
  54. ^ Keith Laybourn (2001). British Political Leaders: A Biographical Dictionary. p. 298. ISBN 9781576070437. from the original on 8 November 2021. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
  55. ^ Langley, Helen (1979). "Catalogue of the papers of John Allsebrook Simon, 1st Viscount Simon, mainly 1894-1953". bodley.ox.ac.uk. Bodleian Libraries, Oxford. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  56. ^ a b c Dutton 1992, pp. 325–6.
  57. ^ Lobel, Mary D. (1959). Victoria County History: A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 6. pp. 134–46.
  58. ^ "A Chessplaying Statesman by Edward Winter". www.chesshistory.com. from the original on 27 September 2020. Retrieved 12 October 2020.
  59. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 365.
  60. ^ Jenkins, Roy The Chancellors (London: Macmillan, 1998), p. 366.
  61. ^ Jenkins 1999, p. 369: "I do not like thee Dr Fell, the reason why I cannot tell, but this I know and know full well, I do not like thee Dr Fell".

Bibliography

  • Dutton, David (1992). Simon: a political biography of Sir John Simon. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 1854102044.
  • Dutton, D. J. (2011) [2004]. "Simon, John Allsebrook, first Viscount Simon (1873–1954)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36098. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Jenkins, Roy (1999). The Chancellors. London: Papermac. ISBN 0333730585. (essay on Simon, pp365–92)
  • Simon, John Simon, 1st Viscount (1952). Retrospect: the Memoirs of the Rt. Hon. Viscount Simon G.C.S.I., G.C.V.O. London: Hutchinson.

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Walthamstow
19061918
Constituency abolished
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Spen Valley
19221940
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Solicitor General
1910–1913
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Attorney General
1913–1915
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Political offices
Preceded by Home Secretary
1915–1916
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Preceded by Foreign Secretary
1931–1935
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Preceded by Home Secretary
1935–1937
Preceded by Chancellor of the Exchequer
1937–1940
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1940–1945
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Party political offices
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New position
Leader of the Liberal National Party
1931–1940
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Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Viscount Simon
1940–1954
Succeeded by
John Gilbert Simon

john, simon, viscount, simon, john, simon, redirects, here, other, people, named, john, simon, john, simon, john, allsebrook, simon, viscount, simon, gcsi, gcvo, february, 1873, january, 1954, british, politician, held, senior, cabinet, posts, from, beginning,. Sir John Simon redirects here For other people named John Simon see John Simon John Allsebrook Simon 1st Viscount Simon GCSI GCVO OBE PC 28 February 1873 11 January 1954 was a British politician who held senior Cabinet posts from the beginning of the First World War to the end of the Second World War He is one of only three people to have served as Home Secretary Foreign Secretary and Chancellor of the Exchequer the others being Rab Butler and James Callaghan The Right HonourableThe Viscount SimonGCSI GCVO OBE PCSimon in 1931Lord High Chancellor of Great BritainIn office 10 May 1940 27 July 1945Prime MinisterWinston ChurchillPreceded byThe Viscount CaldecoteSucceeded byThe Viscount JowittChancellor of the ExchequerIn office 28 May 1937 10 May 1940Prime MinisterNeville ChamberlainPreceded byNeville ChamberlainSucceeded bySir Kingsley WoodForeign SecretaryIn office 5 November 1931 7 June 1935Prime MinisterRamsay MacDonaldPreceded byThe Marquess of ReadingSucceeded bySir Samuel HoareHome SecretaryIn office 7 June 1935 28 May 1937Prime MinisterStanley BaldwinPreceded bySir John GilmourSucceeded bySir Samuel HoareIn office 27 May 1915 12 January 1916Prime MinisterH H AsquithPreceded byReginald McKennaSucceeded byHerbert SamuelAttorney General for England and WalesIn office 19 October 1913 25 May 1915Prime MinisterH H AsquithPreceded bySir Rufus IsaacsSucceeded bySir Edward CarsonSolicitor General for England and WalesIn office 7 October 1910 19 October 1913Prime MinisterH H AsquithPreceded bySir Rufus IsaacsSucceeded bySir Stanley BuckmasterMember of the House of LordsLord TemporalIn office 20 May 1940 11 January 1954Hereditary peeragePreceded byPeerage createdSucceeded byThe 2nd Viscount SimonMember of Parliament for Spen ValleyIn office 15 November 1922 1 June 1940Preceded byTom MyersSucceeded byWilliam WoolleyMember of Parliament for WalthamstowIn office 8 February 1906 14 December 1918Preceded byDavid John MorganSucceeded bySeat abolishedPersonal detailsBornJohn Allsebrook Simon 1873 02 28 28 February 1873Moss Side Manchester Lancashire EnglandDied11 January 1954 1954 01 11 aged 80 Westminster London EnglandPolitical partyLiberal PartyOther politicalaffiliationsNational Liberal PartySpousesEthel Venables m 1899 died 1902 wbr Kathleen Rochard Manning m 1917 wbr Alma materWadham College OxfordHe also served as Lord Chancellor the most senior position in the British legal system Beginning his career as a Liberal identified initially with the left wing 1 but later with the right wing of the party 2 he joined the National Government in 1931 creating the Liberal National Party in the process At the end of his career he was essentially a Conservative Contents 1 Background and education 2 Early political career 3 First World War 4 1920s 4 1 Out of Parliament 4 2 Deputy leader of Liberals 4 3 General strike and Simon Commission 4 4 Liberal National split and moving towards Conservatives 5 1930s National Government 5 1 Foreign Secretary 5 2 Home Secretary 5 3 Chancellor of the Exchequer 5 3 1 Peace 5 3 2 War 6 Lord Chancellor 7 Later life 8 Private life and personality 9 Cases 9 1 House of Lords 9 2 Judicial Committee of the Privy Council 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksBackground and education EditSimon was born in a terraced house on Moss Side Manchester the eldest child and only son 3 4 of Edwin Simon 1843 1920 and wife Fanny Allsebrook 1846 1936 3 His father was a Congregationalist minister like three of his five brothers and was pastor of Zion Chapel in Hulme Manchester His mother was a farmer s daughter and a descendant of Sir Richard Pole and his wife Margaret Pole Countess of Salisbury 3 Congregational ministers were expected to move about the country 5 Simon was educated at King Edward s School Bath as his father was President of Somerset Congregational Union 3 He was then a scholar of Fettes College in Edinburgh 5 3 where he was Head of School and won many prizes 6 He failed to win a scholarship to Balliol College Oxford but won an open scholarship to Wadham College Oxford 3 6 He arrived at Wadham in 1892 7 He achieved Seconds in Mathematics and Classical Moderations 7 He spoke in support of Herbert Samuel for South Oxfordshire in the 1895 election 7 and after two terms as Junior Treasurer became President of the Oxford Union in Hilary Term 1896 3 7 Simon won the Barstow Law Scholarship and graduated with a first in Greats in 1896 3 7 Simon s attendance at Wadham overlapped with those of F E Smith the cricketer C B Fry 3 and the journalist Francis Hirst 7 Smith Fry and Simon played in the Wadham Rugby XV together 8 7 Simon and Smith began a rivalry that lasted throughout their legal and political careers over the next 30 years Simon was in David Dutton s view a finer scholar than Smith Although Smith thought Simon pompous Simon in the words of a contemporary thought that Smith excelled at the cheap score 7 A famous although clearly untrue malicious story had it that Smith and Simon had tossed a coin to decide which party to join 9 Simon was briefly a trainee leader writer for the Manchester Guardian under C P Scott 8 Simon shared lodgings with Leo Amery while both were studying for the All Souls Fellowship both were successful 7 He became a Fellow of All Souls in 1897 3 Simon left Oxford at the end of 1898 3 and was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in 1899 3 He was a pupil of A J Ram and then of Sir Reginald Acland 3 Like many barristers his career got off to a slow start he earned a mere 27 in his first year at the bar 8 At first he earned some extra money by coaching candidates for the bar exams 7 As a barrister he relied on logic and reason rather than oratory and histrionics and he excelled at simplifying complex issues 3 He was a brilliant advocate of complex cases before judges although rather less so before juries 10 Some of his work was done on the Western Circuit at Bristol He worked exceptionally hard often preparing his cases through the night several times a week His initial lack of connections made his eventual success at the Bar all the more impressive 7 Simon was widowed in 1902 and took solace in his work He became a successful lawyer and in 1903 he acted for the British government in the Alaska boundary dispute 11 Even three years after his wife s death he spent Christmas Day 1905 alone by walking aimlessly in France 3 Early political career EditSimon entered the House of Commons as a Liberal Member of Parliament MP for Walthamstow at the 1906 general election In 1908 he became a KC senior barrister 3 at the same time as F E Smith 6 Simon annoyed Smith by not telling his rival in advance that he was applying for silk 7 In 1909 Simon spoke out strongly in parliament in support of David Lloyd George s progressive People s Budget 12 He entered the government on 7 October 1910 as solicitor general 13 succeeding Rufus Isaacs and was knighted later that month 14 as was then usual for government law officers Asquith brushed aside his objections 15 At 37 he was the youngest solicitor general since the 1830s 3 In February 1911 he successfully prosecuted Edward Mylius for criminal libel for claiming that King George V was a bigamist 3 As was then required by the law he fought a by election after his appointment 15 He was honoured with appointment as a KCVO in 1911 3 Asquith referred to him as the Impeccable for his intellectual self assurance 3 but after a series of social encounters he wrote that The Impeccable was becoming The Inevitable 16 Along with Isaacs Simon represented the Board of Trade at the public inquiry into the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912 their close questioning of witnesses helped to prepare the way for improved maritime safety measures 17 Unusually for a government law officer he was active in partisan political debate 15 When F E Smith first spoke from the Conservative front bench in 1912 Simon was put up next to oppose his old rival 7 He was promoted on 19 October 1913 to attorney general 3 18 again succeeding Isaacs Unusually for an attorney general he was made a full member of Cabinet as Isaacs had been rather than simply being invited to attend when he was required He was already being tipped as a potential future Liberal prime minister 3 He was the leader of the unsuccessful cabinet rebels against Winston Churchill s 1914 naval estimates Asquith thought that Simon had organised a conclave of malcontents Lloyd George Reginald McKenna Samuel Charles Hobhouse and Beauchamp He wrote to Asquith that the loss of WC though regrettable is not by any means the splitting of the party Lloyd George referred to Simon as a kind of Robespierre 19 Simon contemplated resigning in protest at the declaration of war in August 1914 but in the end changed his mind 3 He was accused of hypocrisy even though his position was not actually very different from that of Lloyd George 5 He remained in the Cabinet after Asquith reminded him of his public duty and hinted at promotion He damaged himself in the eyes of Hobhouse postmaster general Charles Masterman and the journalist C P Scott Roy Jenkins believed that Simon was genuinely opposed to war 20 Early in 1915 Asquith rated Simon as equal seventh in his score list of the Cabinet after his malaise of last autumn 20 Simon circa 1916First World War EditOn 25 May 1915 Simon became Home Secretary in Asquith s new coalition government He declined an offer of the job of Lord Chancellor which would have meant going to the Lords and restricting his active political career thereafter 3 As home secretary he satisfied nobody He tried to defend the Union of Democratic Control against Edward Carson s attempt to prosecute it However he tried to ban The Times and the Daily Mail for criticising the government s conduct of the war but failed to obtain Cabinet support 21 He resigned in January 1916 in protest against the introduction of conscription of single men which he thought a breach of Liberal principles 3 McKenna and Walter Runciman also opposed conscription but for different reasons they thought that it would weaken British industry and wanted Britain to concentrate her war effort on the Royal Navy and supporting the other Allies with finance 21 In his memoirs Simon would admit that his resignation from the Home Office had been a mistake 22 After Asquith s fall in December 1916 Simon remained in opposition as an Asquithian Liberal 22 Simon proved his patriotism by serving as an officer on Trenchard s staff in the Royal Flying Corps 3 for about a year starting in the summer of 1917 22 His duties included purchasing supplies in Paris where he married his second wife towards the end of 1917 23 Amidst questions as to whether it was appropriate for a serving officer to do so Simon spoke in Trenchard s defence in Parliament when Trenchard resigned as Chief of Air Staff after Trenchard had fallen out with the President of the Air Council Lord Rothermere who soon resigned However Simon was attacked in the Northcliffe Press Northcliffe was Rothermere s brother 24 Simon s Walthamstow constituency was split up at the Coupon Election in 1918 and he was defeated at the new Walthamstow East division 3 11 by a margin of more than 4 000 votes 22 1920s EditOut of Parliament Edit In 1919 he attempted to return to Parliament at the Spen Valley by election Lloyd George put up a coalition Liberal candidate in Spen Valley to keep Simon out 3 and was active behind the scenes trying to see him defeated 25 Although the Coalition Liberals who had formerly held the seat were pushed into third place Simon came second in the view of Maurice Cowling The Impact of Labour 1920 4 his defeat by Labour marked the point at which Labour began to be seen as a serious threat by the older political parties 26 Deputy leader of Liberals Edit In the early 1920s he practised successfully at the bar before being elected for Spen Valley at the general election in 1922 and from 1922 to 1924 he served as deputy leader of the Liberal Party under Asquith 27 28 In the early 1920s he spoke in the House of Commons about socialism the League of Nations unemployment and Ireland He may well have hoped to succeed Asquith as Liberal leader He retired temporarily from the Bar around then 29 In October 1924 Simon moved the amendment that brought down the first Labour government At that year s general election the Conservatives were returned to power and the Liberals were reduced to a rump of just over 40 MPs Although Asquith who had lost his seat remained leader of the party Lloyd George was elected chairman of the Liberal MPs by 29 votes to 9 Simon abstained in the vote By this time he was increasingly anti socialist and quite friendly to the Conservative leader Stanley Baldwin and clashed increasingly with Lloyd George He stood down as deputy leader and returned to the Bar 3 29 General strike and Simon Commission Edit Unlike Lloyd George Simon opposed the 1926 general strike On 6 May the fourth day of the strike he declared in the House of Commons that the strike was illegal 3 and argued that it was not entitled to the legal privileges of the Trade Disputes Act 1906 and that the union bosses would be liable to the utmost farthing in damages for the harm that they inflicted on businesses and for inciting the men to break their contracts of employment Simon was highly respected as an authority on the law but was neither popular nor seen as a political leader 30 Simon was then one of the highest paid barristers of his generation and was believed to earn between 36 000 and 70 000 per annum equivalent to 4 300 000 in 2021 22 31 It seemed for a while that he might abandon politics altogether 3 Simon spoke for Newfoundland in the Labrador boundary dispute with Canada before he announced his permanent retirement from the Bar 32 From 1927 to 1931 he chaired the Indian Constitutional Development Committee or the Indian Statutory Commission known as the Simon Commission on the constitution of India 33 3 Upon the commission s arrival in Bombay in February 1928 it was immediately met with a hartal and protestors holding black flags and banners reading Simon Go Back coined by Yusuf Meherally involving prominent Indian political leaders such as Lala Lajpat Rai and Tanguturi Prakasam The protests erupted due to the lack of Indian representation on the commission with the group composed of seven all British Members of Parliament 34 His personality was already something of an issue Neville Chamberlain wrote of him to the Viceroy of India Lord Irwin 12 August 1928 I am always trying to like him and believing I shall succeed when something crops up to put me off 35 3 Dutton describes Simon s eventual report as a lucid exposition of the problems of the subcontinent in all their complexity However Simon had been hampered by the inquiry s terms of reference no Indians had been included on the committee and his conclusions were overshadowed by the Irwin Declaration of October 1929 which Simon opposed which promised India eventual dominion status 33 3 Simon was appointed GCSI 1930 3 Liberal National split and moving towards Conservatives Edit Before serving on the committee Simon had obtained a guarantee that he would not be opposed by a Conservative candidate at Spen Valley at the 1929 general election and indeed he was never again opposed by a Conservative 36 During the late 1920s and especially during the 1929 31 Parliament in which Labour had no majority but continued in office with the help of the Liberals Simon was seen as the leader of the minority of Liberal MPs who disliked Lloyd George s inclination to support Labour rather than the Conservatives Simon still supported free trade during the 1929 31 Parliament 3 In 1930 Simon headed the official inquiry into the R101 airship disaster 3 In June 1931 before the formation of the National Government Simon resigned the Liberal whip In September Simon and his 30 or so followers became the Liberal Nationals later renamed the National Liberals and increasingly aligned themselves with the Conservatives for practical purposes 3 33 Simon was accused by Lloyd George of leaving the slime of hypocrisy as he crossed the floor on another occasion Lloyd George is said to have commented that he had sat on the fence so long the iron has entered into his soul but this quote is more difficult to verify 16 1930s National Government EditForeign Secretary Edit Simon was not initially included in Ramsay MacDonald s National Government which was formed in August 1931 Simon offered to give up his seat at Spen Valley to MacDonald if the latter had trouble holding Seaham MacDonald held the seat in 1931 but lost it in 1935 37 On 5 November 1931 Simon was appointed Foreign Secretary when the National Government was reconstituted 37 3 The appointment was at first greeted with acclaim 3 Simon s Liberal Nationals continued to support protectionism and Ramsay MacDonald s National Government after the departure of the mainstream Liberals led by Herbert Samuel who left the government in 1932 and formally went into Opposition in November 1933 3 Simon s tenure of office saw a number of important events in foreign policy including the Japanese invasion of Manchuria which had begun in September 1931 before he had taken office Simon attracted particular opprobrium for his speech to the General Assembly of the League of Nations at Geneva on 7 December 1932 in which he failed to denounce Japan unequivocally 3 38 Thereafter Simon was known as the Man of Manchukuo and was compared unfavourably to the young Anthony Eden who was popular at Geneva 39 At the same time Adolf Hitler was coming to power in Germany in January 1933 Hitler immediately withdrew Germany from the League of Nations and announced a programme of rearmament initially to give Germany armed forces commensurate with France and other powers Simon did not foresee the sheer scale of Hitler s ambitions but Dutton pointed out the same was then true for many others 3 Simon s term of office also saw the failure of the World Disarmament Conference 1932 1934 His contribution was not entirely in vain since he proposed qualitative seeking to limit or ban certain types of weapon rather than quantitative simple numbers of weapons disarmament 3 Simon does not appear to have been considered for the post of Chancellor of Oxford University in succession to Viscount Grey in 1933 since Simon was then at the depth of his unpopularity as Foreign Secretary Lord Irwin was elected and since he lived until 1959 the job did not fall vacant again in Simon s lifetime 40 There was talk of Neville Chamberlain who dominated the government s domestic policy becoming Foreign Secretary but that would have been intolerable to MacDonald who took a keen interest in foreign affairs and wanted a leading non Conservative in that role In 1933 and late 1934 Simon was being criticised by both Austen and Neville Chamberlain as well as by Eden Lloyd George Nancy Astor David Margesson Vincent Massey Runciman Jan Smuts and Churchill 37 Simon accompanied MacDonald to negotiate the Stresa Front with France and Italy in April 1935 but it was MacDonald who took the lead in the negotiations 39 Simon himself did not think that Stresa would stop German rearmament but thought that it might be a useful deterrent against territorial aggression by Hitler 41 The first stirrings of Italian aggression towards Abyssinia now Ethiopia were also then seen During Simon s tenure of the Foreign Office British defence strength was at its lowest point of the interwar period which severely limited his freedom of action 3 Even Simon s colleagues thought that he had been a disastrous Foreign Secretary the worst since AEthelred the Unready as one wag put it He was better at analysing a problem than at concluding and acting 3 Jenkins commented that he was a bad Foreign Secretary in the view of his contemporaries and ever since and concurs that he was better at analysing than solving Neville Chamberlain thought he always sounded as though he was speaking from a brief 42 37 Simon s officials despaired of him since he had few thoughts of his own solutions were imposed on him by others and he defended them only weakly 43 Leo Amery was a rare defender of Simon s record in 1937 he recorded that Simon really had been a sound foreign minister and Stresa marked the nearest Europe has been to peace since 1914 44 Home Secretary Edit Simon served as Home Secretary in Stanley Baldwin s Third Government from 7 June 1935 to 28 May 1937 That position was in Dutton s view better suited to his abilities than the Foreign Office 3 45 He also became Deputy Leader of the House of Commons on the understanding that the latter position would be given to Neville Chamberlain after the election in the event it was not 46 In 1935 Simon was the last Home Secretary to attend a royal birth of the present Duke of Kent 46 He passed the Public Order Act 1936 restricting the activities of Oswald Mosley s Blackshirts He also played a key role behind the scenes in the 1936 Abdication Crisis 3 He was one of the signatories to the Anglo Egyptian Treaty of 1936 47 He also introduced the Factories Act 1937 46 Simon was devoted to his mother 43 and wrote a well received Portrait of My Mother in 1936 after her death 3 Chancellor of the Exchequer Edit Peace Edit In 1937 Neville Chamberlain succeeded Baldwin as prime minister Simon succeeded Chamberlain as Chancellor of the Exchequer and was raised to GCVO in 1937 As Chancellor he tried to keep arms spending as low as possible in the belief that a strong economy was the fourth arm of defence 3 In 1937 he presented a finance bill that was based on the budget that Chamberlain had drawn up before being promoted 48 In 1938 public expenditure passed the previously unthinkable level of 1 000m for the first time In the spring 1938 budget Simon raised the income tax from 5s to 5s 6d and increased duties on tea and petrol 48 Simon had become a close political ally of Chamberlain 3 and flattered him a great deal In the autumn of 1938 he led the Cabinet to Heston Airport to wish him God speed on his flight to meet Hitler and he helped to persuade Chamberlain to make the high case for Munich that he had achieved a lasting peace rather than that he had only limited potential damage 49 He retained the support of Chamberlain until around the middle of 1939 48 In the spring 1939 budget income tax was unchanged and the surtax was increased as were indirect taxes on cars sugar and tobacco It was not a war budget even though Hitler had already broken the Munich Accords by occupying Prague 48 War Edit On 2 September 1939 Simon led a deputation of ministers to see Chamberlain to insist for Britain to honour her guarantee to Poland and go to war if Hitler did not withdraw Simon became a member of the small War Cabinet 3 On the outbreak of war sterling was devalued with very little attention from 4 89 to 4 03 50 At the emergency budget of September 1939 public expenditure had passed 2 000m income tax was increased from 5s 6d 27 5 to 7s 6d 37 5 duties on alcohol petrol and sugar were hiked and a 60 tax on excess profits was introduced 48 Simon s political position weakened as he came to be seen as a symbol of foot dragging and the lack of commitment to total war Along with Labour s dislike of Chamberlain he was used as an excuse by the opposition parties for not joining the government on the outbreak of war Archibald Sinclair the leader of the official Liberal Party said that for over seven years Simon had been the evil genius of British foreign policy Hugh Dalton and Clement Attlee were very critical of Simon as were many government backbenchers 50 Chamberlain privately told colleagues that he found Simon very much deteriorated Simon s position weakened after Churchill rejoined the Cabinet on the outbreak of war and got on surprisingly well with Chamberlain who toyed with the idea of replacing Simon with former Chancellor Reginald McKenna then aged 76 or Lord Stamp the chairman of the LMS Railway who had a secret meeting at Downing Street about the position Even Captain Margesson the Chief Whip fancied his chances for the position 50 Simon s last budget in April 1940 saw public spending pass 2 700m 46 of which was paid for from taxation and the rest from borrowing 48 Simon s April 1940 budget kept income tax at 7s 6d a Punch cartoon expressed a widely held view that it should have been increased to 10s 50 Tax allowances were increased Postal charges were increased as were charges on tobacco matches and alcohol The purchase tax an ancestor of today s value added tax VAT was introduced 50 In April 1940 he rejected John Maynard Keynes idea of a forced loan a tax disguised as a compulsory purchase of government securities Keynes wrote a coruscating letter of rebuke to The Times Simon found himself criticised from opposite ends of the spectrum by Leo Amery and Aneurin Bevan 51 Lord Chancellor EditIn May 1940 following the Norway Debate Simon urged Chamberlain to stand firm as Prime Minister although Simon offered to resign and take Samuel Hoare with him 51 By 1940 Simon along with his successor as Foreign Secretary Hoare had come to be seen as one of the Guilty Men responsible for appeasement of the dictators and like Hoare Simon was not regarded as acceptable in the War Cabinet of Churchill s new coalition Hugh Dalton thought Simon the snakiest of the lot 16 Simon became Lord Chancellor in Churchill s government but without a place on the War Cabinet Attlee commented that he will be quite innocuous in the role 51 52 On 13 May 1940 he was created Viscount Simon of Stackpole Elidor in the County of Pembroke a village from which his father traced descent 3 In Dutton s view of all the senior positions which he held that was the one for which he was most suited As Lord Chancellor he delivered important judgements on the damages due for death caused by negligence and on how the judge ought to direct the jury in a murder trial if a possible defence of manslaughter arose 3 In 1943 alone he delivered 43 major judgements on complex cases RVF Heuston Lives of the Lord Chancellors described him as a superb Lord Chancellor Jenkins comments that it is even more impressive in that many senior judges had over 20 years experience at that level whereas Simon had been retired from the law since 1928 53 Simon interrogated Rudolf Hess who had flown to Scotland 3 53 and also chaired the Royal Commission on the Birthrate 53 In May 1945 after the end of the wartime coalition Simon continued as Lord Chancellor but was not included in the Cabinet of the short lived Churchill caretaker ministry After Churchill s defeat in the 1945 general election Simon never held office again 51 Later life EditAlthough he had won plaudits for his legal skills as Lord Chancellor Clement Attlee declined to appoint him to the British delegation at the Nuremberg War Trials and told him bluntly in a letter that Simon s role in the prewar governments made it unwise 53 Simon remained active in the House of Lords and as a senior judge on the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council He wrote a well regarded practitioners text Simon on Income Tax in 1948 3 In 1948 Simon succeeded Lord Sankey as High Steward of Oxford University 3 The position is often held by a distinguished Oxonian lawyer Relations with his nearly alcoholic wife were somewhat strained and he increasingly spent his weekends at All Souls 40 of which he was Senior Fellow 7 Simon was a vigorous campaigner against socialism across the country in the general elections of 1945 1950 and 1951 40 Churchill blocked Simon who had stepped down as leader of the National Liberals in 1940 from joining the Conservative Party 3 Churchill was keen to lend Conservative support to the official Liberals including his old friend Lady Violet Bonham Carter but blocked a full merger between the Conservatives and the National Liberals although a constituency level merger was negotiated with the Conservative Party chairman Lord Woolton in 1947 thereafter the National Liberals were increasingly absorbed into the Conservatives for practical purposes until they fully merged in 1968 40 Although Simon was still physically and mentally vigorous aged 78 when the Conservatives returned to power in 1951 Churchill offered him neither a return to the Woolsack nor any other office 3 In 1952 Simon published his memoirs Retrospect 3 The quote I so very tire of politics The early death of too many a great man is attributed to her touch is from Simon s memoir Harold Nicolson reviewed the book as describing the nectarines and peaches of office as if they were a bag of prunes 10 Simon died from a stroke on 11 January 1954 He was an atheist and was cremated in his Oxford robes 3 His estate was valued for probate at 93 006 12s equivalent to 2 700 000 in 2021 54 3 31 Despite his huge earnings at the Bar he was not particularly greedy for money and was generous to All Souls to junior barristers and to the children of friends 43 His personal papers are preserved in the Bodleian Library Oxford 55 Private life and personality Edit Dame Kathleen Simon Viscountess Simon 17 February 1920 Simon married Ethel Mary Venables a niece of the historian J R Green on 24 May 1899 in Headington Oxfordshire They had three children Margaret born 1900 who later married Geoffrey Edwards Joan born 1901 who later married John Bickford Smith and John Gilbert 2nd Viscount Simon 1902 1993 Ethel died soon after the birth of their son Gilbert in September 1902 3 There are some suggestions that his first wife s death may have been caused by misguided use of homeopathic medicines which added to Simon s guilt In Jenkins view widowerhood although common for politicians of the era may have affected Simon s cold personality He later apparently tried to persuade Margaret Greville the hostess of Polesden Lacey to marry him 8 Greville later claimed that he had told her that he would marry the next woman he met 56 In 1917 in Paris Simon married the abolition activist Kathleen Manning 1863 64 1955 a widow with one adult son who had for a while been governess to his children 3 Her social gaucheness and inability to play the part of a great lady caused embarrassment on the Simon Commission in the late 1920s and Neville Chamberlain found her a sore trial She had increasing health problems and dr ank to excess as she grew older 56 Jenkins wrote that she was tactless and by the late 1930s had become a virtual alcoholic but that Simon treated her with tolerance and kindness 15 In 1938 Simon stepped down at Spen Valley and was selected as candidate for Great Yarmouth since he needed a seat nearer London for the sake of his wife s health in the event he never stood for his new seat but remained MP for Spen Valley until his elevation to the Lords in 1940 56 Simon bought Fritwell Manor in Oxfordshire in 1911 and lived there until 1933 57 He was an avid chess player and frequently sought for as a dignitary to open major chess tournaments in England 58 Simon was neither liked nor trusted and he was never seriously considered for prime minister 59 He possessed an unfortunately chilly manner and from at least 1914 onwards he had difficulty in conveying an impression that he was acting from honourable motives His awkward attempts to strike up friendships with his colleagues asking his Cabinet colleagues to call him Jack only J H Thomas did so and Neville Chamberlain settled on John often fell flat 60 Jenkins likens him to the nursery rhyme character Dr Fell 61 In the 1930s his reputation sank particularly low Although Simon s athletic build and good looks were remarked on even into his old age the cartoonist David Low portrayed him with in Low s own words a sinuous writhing body to reflect his disposition to subtle compromise 3 Harold Nicolson after Simon had grabbed his arm from behind to talk to him 19 October 1944 wrote pithily God what a toad and a worm Simon is 16 Another anecdote from the late 1940s tells how the socialist intellectual G D H Cole got into a third class compartment on the train back from Oxford to London to break off conversation with Simon to his dismay Simon followed suit only for both men to produce first class tickets when the inspector did his rounds 35 Cases EditHouse of Lords Edit Nokes v Doncaster Amalgamated Collieries Ltd 1940 AC 1014Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Edit Abitibi Power and Paper Company Limited v Montreal Trust Company 1943 AC 536 1943 UKPC 37 PC Canada Constitution Act 1867 s 92 13 provincial power to enact specific moratorium legislation Atlantic Smoke Shops Limited v Conlon 1943 AC 550 1943 UKPC 44 PC Canada Constitution Act 1867 s 92 2 provincial power to impose sales taxes The Attorney General of Ontario and others v The Canada Temperance Foundation and others 1946 AC 193 1946 UKPC 2 PC Canada Constitution Act 1867 s 91 peace order and good government federal power to enact laws relating to matters of national concernReferences Edit Keith Laybourn 2002 Fifty Key Figures in Twentieth century British Politics p 209 ISBN 9780415226769 Retrieved 1 April 2016 Jennings Ivor 1961 Party Politics Volume 2 The Growth of Parties Cambridge University Press p 268 ISBN 9780521137942 Retrieved 3 August 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm Dutton D J 2011 2004 Simon John Allsebrook first Viscount Simon 1873 1954 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 36098 Subscription or UK public library membership required Jenkins 1999 p 369 states that he was an only child a b c Jenkins 1999 p 369 a b c Jenkins 1999 p 370 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dutton 1992 pp 7 9 a b c d Jenkins 1999 p 371 Jenkins 1999 p 370 Jenkins states that Smith and Simon both started at Wadham on the same day in 1891 which is not supported by Dutton s more detailed biography a b Jenkins 1999 p 367 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1922 Simon Sir John Allsebrook Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 32 12th ed London amp New York The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company pp 498 499 Finance Bill Hansard 4 November 1909 Hansard millbanksystems com Archived from the original on 15 September 2015 Retrieved 1 April 2016 No 28424 The London Gazette 4 October 1910 p 7247 No 28429 The London Gazette 28 October 1910 p 7611 a b c d Jenkins 1999 p 372 a b c d Jenkins 1999 p 366 Dutton 1992 p 17 No 28766 The London Gazette 21 October 1913 p 7336 Jenkins 1999 p 373 a b Jenkins 1999 p 374 a b Jenkins 1999 p 375 a b c d e Jenkins 1999 p 376 Dutton 1992 p 45 Dutton 1992 p 46 Dutton states erroneously that Trenchard resigned as Commander of the Royal Flying Corps the position which Trenchard had held on the Western Front in 1916 to 1917 Jenkins 1999 p 377 Cowling Maurice 1971 The Impact of Labour 1920 1924 The Beginning of Modern British Politics Cambridge Studies in the History and Theory of Politics Cambridge University Press London Correspondence Archived 25 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Glasgow Herald 24 November 1922 p 9 Dutton 1992 p 59 a b Jenkins 1999 p 378 Jenkins 1999 p 379 a b Compute the Relative Value of a U K Pound Archived from the original on 31 March 2016 Retrieved 22 October 2017 Jenkins 1999 p 380 a b c Jenkins 1999 p 381 Tarique Mohammad 2008 Modern Indian History New Delhi Tata McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 066030 4 a b Jenkins Roy The Chancellors London Macmillan 1998 pp 366 67 Jenkins 1999 pp 377 381 a b c d Jenkins 1999 p 382 Douglas Reed All Our Tomorrows 1942 p 62 Geneva 1931 Sir John Simon congratulated by the Japanese emissary for presentation of Japan s case against China a b Jenkins 1999 p 384 a b c d Jenkins 1999 p 392 Dutton 1992 p 220 Jenkins 1999 p 383 a b c Jenkins 1999 p 368 Dutton 1992 p 207 Rose Kenneth 1983 King George V London Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 402 ISBN 0 297 78245 2 OCLC 9909629 It was thus that on the morning of 20 January 1936 three members of the Privy Council came down to Sandringham MacDonald the Lord President of the Council Hailsham the Lord Chancellor and Simon the Home Secretary a b c Jenkins 1999 p 385 Historic Anglo Egyptian treaty signed in London archive 1936 Guardian 27 August 2021 Archived from the original on 27 August 2021 Retrieved 28 August 2021 a b c d e f Jenkins 1999 p 388 Jenkins 1999 p 386 a b c d Jenkins 1999 p 389 a b c d Jenkins 1999 p 390 At the time besides being Minister in charge of the judiciary the Lord Chancellor was also Speaker of the House of Lords and was himself the most senior judge He sat as one of the Law Lords the senior judges who carried out the judicial functions of the House of Lords They were a predecessor to today s Supreme Court of the United Kingdom a b c d Jenkins 1999 p 391 Keith Laybourn 2001 British Political Leaders A Biographical Dictionary p 298 ISBN 9781576070437 Archived from the original on 8 November 2021 Retrieved 1 April 2016 Langley Helen 1979 Catalogue of the papers of John Allsebrook Simon 1st Viscount Simon mainly 1894 1953 bodley ox ac uk Bodleian Libraries Oxford Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 March 2016 a b c Dutton 1992 pp 325 6 Lobel Mary D 1959 Victoria County History A History of the County of Oxford Volume 6 pp 134 46 A Chessplaying Statesman by Edward Winter www chesshistory com Archived from the original on 27 September 2020 Retrieved 12 October 2020 Jenkins 1999 p 365 Jenkins Roy The Chancellors London Macmillan 1998 p 366 Jenkins 1999 p 369 I do not like thee Dr Fell the reason why I cannot tell but this I know and know full well I do not like thee Dr Fell Bibliography EditDutton David 1992 Simon a political biography of Sir John Simon London Aurum Press ISBN 1854102044 Dutton D J 2011 2004 Simon John Allsebrook first Viscount Simon 1873 1954 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 36098 Subscription or UK public library membership required Jenkins Roy 1999 The Chancellors London Papermac ISBN 0333730585 essay on Simon pp365 92 Simon John Simon 1st Viscount 1952 Retrospect the Memoirs of the Rt Hon Viscount Simon G C S I G C V O London Hutchinson External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Simon 1st Viscount Simon Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by the Viscount Simon A Chessplaying Statesman Biography of Simon Portraits of John Simon 1st Viscount Simon at the National Portrait Gallery London Newspaper clippings about John Simon 1st Viscount Simon in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Archives of John Simon 1st Viscount Simon Sir John Allsebrooke Simon fonds R150 are held at Library and Archives CanadaParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byDavid John Morgan Member of Parliament for Walthamstow1906 1918 Constituency abolishedPreceded byTom Myers Member of Parliament for Spen Valley1922 1940 Succeeded byWilliam Edward WoolleyLegal officesPreceded bySir Rufus Isaacs Solicitor General1910 1913 Succeeded bySir Stanley BuckmasterAttorney General1913 1915 Succeeded bySir Edward CarsonPolitical officesPreceded byReginald McKenna Home Secretary1915 1916 Succeeded byHerbert SamuelPreceded byThe Marquess of Reading Foreign Secretary1931 1935 Succeeded bySir Samuel HoarePreceded bySir John Gilmour Home Secretary1935 1937Preceded byNeville Chamberlain Chancellor of the Exchequer1937 1940 Succeeded bySir Kingsley WoodPreceded byThe Viscount Caldecote Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain1940 1945 Succeeded byThe Viscount JowittParty political officesPreceded byNew position Leader of the Liberal National Party1931 1940 Succeeded byErnest BrownPeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Viscount Simon1940 1954 Succeeded byJohn Gilbert Simon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Simon 1st Viscount Simon amp oldid 1131771190, wikipedia, wiki, 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