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Violet Milner, Viscountess Milner

Violet Georgina Milner, Viscountess Milner (née Maxse; 1 February 1872 – 10 October 1958) was an English socialite of the Victorian and Edwardian eras and, later, editor of the political monthly National Review.[1] Her father was close friends with Georges Clemenceau,[2] she married the son of Prime Minister Salisbury, Lord Edward Cecil, and upon his death, Alfred Milner, 1st Viscount Milner.

Violet Maxse, 1888 (age 16)
The Bust of Alfred Milner
Stained Glass at Doullens Town Hall, commemorating the Doullens Conference and the Unity of Command. Lord Milner is standing, centre

Life

Violet was the youngest of four children born to Admiral Frederick Maxse and Cecilia Steel. Her siblings were Gen. Sir Ivor Maxse (1862–1958), a British Army officer of the First World War; Leopold Maxse (1864–1932), editor of the National Review, and Olive Hermione Maxse (1867–1955), a model for Edward Burne-Jones.[3][4] Admiral Maxse delivered despatches during the Crimean War, and he was one of only two outspoken supporters of the French position regarding Alsace-Lorraine after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870. This drew the attention of Georges Clemenceau, and the two became friends. As a teenager, Violet lived two years in Paris, studying music and art, often attending opera and theater shows with Clemenceau.[5]

One of the highlights of 1897 for Violet was Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee Celebration, on June 22, when she joined the Cecil family on a stand at Whitehall to watch the parade.[6]

With the breakdown of peace negotiations in South Africa between English and Dutch settlers, leading the Boer War in 1899, the British increased their military presence there by dispatching 2,000 soldiers. Among them was Major Edward Cecil and his wife.[7] Arriving in Cape Town on 26 July, Lady Edward wrote often to her cousin, future Prime Minister Arthur Balfour, in support of England and the policies of its High Commissioner for South Africa, Sir Alfred Milner. With the Cecils and Milner residing at Government House, the three were good friends and lived under the same roof until 14 August, when the Cecils were ordered to move north.[8] When Major Cecil became trapped in the Siege of Mafeking (from 13 October 1899 to 17 May 1900), Violet stayed at Groote Schuur, the estate of mining magnate and politician Cecil Rhodes. She wrote of her experiences during this time in her autobiography, "My Picture Gallery", published in 1951.

She exchanged letters with Alfred, and alongside Violet Markham and Edith Lyttelton she established the Victoria League in 1901 to promote Milner's imperial vision of the British Empire.[9] She met up with Lord Milner again at a Christmas party held at Lord Goschen's country estate Seacox, Hawkhurst in December 1905.[10]

Lady Milner took over as editor of the family owned, conservative journal The National Review after the death of her brother Leopold Maxse in 1932, having supported the publication since he fell ill in 1929.[11] The magazine was known for its opposition to imperial Germany prior to the First World War, and to appeasement in the interwar years. Its editor was staunchly defended by Conservative leader Bonar Law.[12]

In January 1917, French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, speaking to President Raymond Poincaré, famously said of Lord Milner:

"He is an old friend of mine. We admired and loved the same woman. That's an indissoluble bond."[13]

Viscountess Milner was present in France on 11 November 1933, the 15th anniversary of the Armistice, where she dedicated a marble bust of her late husband, Alfred, in a conference room on the second floor of Doullens Town Hall. It was here at Lord Milner's urging, in a conference attended by Clemenceau, Poincare, and French and English Generals on 26 March 1918, that the Western Front was united under a single command in World War I. Today, Doullens Town Hall bears the inscription:

"In this town hall, on the 26th of March 1918, the "Allies" entrusted General Foch with the supreme command on the Western Front. This decision saved France and the liberty of the world."[14]

Per Supreme War Cabinet Secretary Leopold Amery, the decision to appoint General Foch was made a day earlier in a meeting between Lord Milner and Prime Minister Clemenceau.[15] As General Foch was not on the list of Clemenceau's promotable generals (he was out of favor),[16] Lord Milner's influence with Clemenceau made the decision easy. On 20 April 1918, in his first public statement after being appointed Secretary of State for War, Lord Milner said in "The Temps" ("The Times") newspaper of France:

"Our fighters are worthy of the test they face. Attacked by divisions far more numerous than ours, they supplement the number by courage, and they decimate the assailant. We are happy to see our French allies doing them justice." "I have not waited until now, neither to understand the usefulness of a single command, nor to recognize the value of General Foch. I was personally associated with the measures which created the current organization of the command, and I congratulate myself on the cordial confidence which has constantly reigned between Mr. Clemenceau and myself." "It is not in vain that we will have shared the same anxieties fraternally, then the same joys. The days in which we are living create imperishable bonds."[17]

Violet discussed her family's long time friendship with Georges Clemenceau in The National Review, and in her book, Clemenceau Intime.[18][19]

She died on 10 October 1958, aged 86, at her home near Hawkhurst.

Family

She married, firstly, Lord Edward Cecil, the youngest son of Prime Minister Salisbury on 18 June 1894 at St Saviour's Church, Chelsea. The officiant was his brother Rev William Cecil. A wide range of society guests appeared at the wedding, Asquith, Morley and Chamberlain, as well as his cousin Balfour and father Salisbury, and liberal poets Blunt and Wilde. His mother, Lady Salisbury remarked: "It will be good for Nigs to have a clever wife and one accustomed to taking care of expenses and I hope will convert her. I don't believe in pious pagans - and my only real objection to the Souls, is their heathenry." His father warned him about her character; and settled a further £1,000 pa having settled his debts again. Lord Edward earned £200 pa in Army pay, but his wife's contribution was double that, making their life comfortable. Salisbury urged them to work on their relationship, but the marriage was unhappy..

She and Lord Edward Cecil had two children:

  • One son, George Edward Gascoyne-Cecil born on 9 September 1895. He was a Lieutenant in the Grenadier Guards, and was killed in action in the First World War on 1 September 1914 on the Western Front. Rudyard Kipling, Georges Clemenceau, and former President Theodore Roosevelt helped her track down his fate.[20]
  • One daughter, Helen Mary Gascoyne-Cecil, who was born on 11 May 1901. She was an author. She married Alexander Hardinge, 2nd Baron Hardinge of Penshurst, and died in 1979.

Lady Edward Cecil was appointed Grand Dame of the Order of St John, and Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur.[21]

Lord Edward died on 13 December 1918 of the Spanish influenza, and she married Lord Milner on 26 February 1921.[11] Lady Edward and Lord Milner were married 12 days after Lord Milner's retirement from Prime Minister Lloyd George's government on 14 February 1921. They had a great marriage. On 22 May 1928 she turned over important information relating to the First World War and Lord Milner's role at the Doullens Conference in France to the Public Records Office.

Upon Lord Milner's death in May 1925, Violet inherited nearly £46,000 (£2.8 million in 2020).[22] In 1929 she donated Sturry Court, Milner's residence in Canterbury, to The King's School, Canterbury. The site now houses the Junior Kings School. [a] She continued to maintain Great Wigsell, her manor home in Salehurst, and 13 Manchester Square, their joint house in London.

Notes

  1. ^ Although some sources suggest Lady Milner sold the estate to the school, a letter from George Bell, Dean of Canterbury appears to confirm it was a donation; "I need not tell you again how grateful we are, or how much we appreciate the gift both of itself and for the traditions and hopes which it contains."[23]

References

  1. ^ "Obituary: Viscountess Milner – Brilliant Talker and Hostess". The Times. 11 October 1958. p. 8.
  2. ^ The Times, 6/30/00, pg. 8
  3. ^ Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003). Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knighthood (107 ed.). Burke's Peerage & Gentry. pp. 351–352. ISBN 0-9711966-2-1.
  4. ^ "Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones Bt., A.R.A., R.W.S. (1833-1898), Portrait study of Olive Maxse, probably for 'The Sirens'". Christie's. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  5. ^ Hoschschild, Adam, "To End All Wars", pg. 28
  6. ^ Cecil, Hugh & Mirabel, "Imperial Marriage", pg. 99
  7. ^ London Gazette, 17 Oct 1899, pg. 6262
  8. ^ Thompson, J. L., "Forgotten Patriot", pgs. 143, 145
  9. ^ Cecil, Hugh; Cecil, Mirabel (2005). Imperial Marriage: An Edwardian War and Peace. History Press. ISBN 978-0-7509-3799-3.
  10. ^ O'Brien, Terence, "Milner", pg. 230
  11. ^ a b Cecil, Hugh. "Milner, Violet Georgina". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35039. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ Beaverbrook, Lord, The Decline and Fall of Lloyd George, New York: Duell, 1963, pgs. 194-195
  13. ^ Thompson, pg. 334
  14. ^ Aston, George, "The Biography of the Late Marshal Foch", pgs 285-286.
  15. ^ Amery, Leopold, "My Political Life, Vol II" pgs. 146-147
  16. ^ Clemenceau, Georges, "Grandeur and Misery of Victory", pg. 39
  17. ^ The Temps, "Declarations de Lord Milner", 20 April 1918, pg. 1
  18. ^ The National Review, Vol. CXV, "Clemenceau", pgs. 41-46
  19. ^ Review of the Two Worlds, "Clemenceau Intime", pgs. 611-619
  20. ^ Hochschild, pgs. 119-122
  21. ^ My Picture Gallery (ed.) National Review 1932-48.
  22. ^ O'Brien, pg. 389
  23. ^ "Junior King's Celebrates 90 Years at Milner Court". The OKS Association. Retrieved 29 September 2022.

Primary sources

  • The Times (of London) archive website
  • Beaverbrook, Lord The Decline and Fall of Lloyd George, New York: Duell, Sloan, 1963
  • The London Gazette
  • Milner, Violet (Viscountess Milner), My Picture Gallery: 1886 - 1901, London: John Murray, 1951
  • O'Brien, Terence, Milner, London: Constable, 1979
  • Thompson, J, Lee, Forgotten Patriot: A life of Alfred, Viscount Milner of St James's and Cape Town, 1854-1925, Cranbury, NJ: Rosemont Publishing, 2007
  • Hochschild, Adam, To End All Wars, A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918, Boston: Houghton, 2011
  • Cecil, Hugh & Mirabel, Imperial Marriage, London: Murray, 2002
  • Aston, George, The Biography of the Late Marshal Foch, New York: MacMillan, 1929
  • Amery, Leopold, My Political Life: Volume II, War and Peace, 1914 - 1929, London: Hutchinson, 1953
  • The Temps (French newspaper), Digital Archives: Link
  • The National Review, Vol. 115, July to December 1940, "Clemenceau", London: The Proprietors, 1940
  • Review Des Mondes, 15 February 1953, Clemenceau Intime, Paris: Revue des Deux Mondes, 1953 pdf
  • Clemenceau, Georges, Grandeur and Misery of Victory, New York: Harcourt, 1930

External links

  • Violet Milner Papers at the Bodleian Library
  • Foucart, Pierre, Doullens: The Room of Single Command

violet, milner, viscountess, milner, this, article, external, links, follow, wikipedia, policies, guidelines, please, improve, this, article, removing, excessive, inappropriate, external, links, converting, useful, links, where, appropriate, into, footnote, re. This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Violet Georgina Milner Viscountess Milner nee Maxse 1 February 1872 10 October 1958 was an English socialite of the Victorian and Edwardian eras and later editor of the political monthly National Review 1 Her father was close friends with Georges Clemenceau 2 she married the son of Prime Minister Salisbury Lord Edward Cecil and upon his death Alfred Milner 1st Viscount Milner Violet Maxse 1888 age 16 The Bust of Alfred Milner Stained Glass at Doullens Town Hall commemorating the Doullens Conference and the Unity of Command Lord Milner is standing centre Contents 1 Life 2 Family 3 Notes 4 References 5 Primary sources 6 External linksLife EditViolet was the youngest of four children born to Admiral Frederick Maxse and Cecilia Steel Her siblings were Gen Sir Ivor Maxse 1862 1958 a British Army officer of the First World War Leopold Maxse 1864 1932 editor of the National Review and Olive Hermione Maxse 1867 1955 a model for Edward Burne Jones 3 4 Admiral Maxse delivered despatches during the Crimean War and he was one of only two outspoken supporters of the French position regarding Alsace Lorraine after the Franco Prussian War of 1870 This drew the attention of Georges Clemenceau and the two became friends As a teenager Violet lived two years in Paris studying music and art often attending opera and theater shows with Clemenceau 5 One of the highlights of 1897 for Violet was Queen Victoria s Diamond Jubilee Celebration on June 22 when she joined the Cecil family on a stand at Whitehall to watch the parade 6 With the breakdown of peace negotiations in South Africa between English and Dutch settlers leading the Boer War in 1899 the British increased their military presence there by dispatching 2 000 soldiers Among them was Major Edward Cecil and his wife 7 Arriving in Cape Town on 26 July Lady Edward wrote often to her cousin future Prime Minister Arthur Balfour in support of England and the policies of its High Commissioner for South Africa Sir Alfred Milner With the Cecils and Milner residing at Government House the three were good friends and lived under the same roof until 14 August when the Cecils were ordered to move north 8 When Major Cecil became trapped in the Siege of Mafeking from 13 October 1899 to 17 May 1900 Violet stayed at Groote Schuur the estate of mining magnate and politician Cecil Rhodes She wrote of her experiences during this time in her autobiography My Picture Gallery published in 1951 She exchanged letters with Alfred and alongside Violet Markham and Edith Lyttelton she established the Victoria League in 1901 to promote Milner s imperial vision of the British Empire 9 She met up with Lord Milner again at a Christmas party held at Lord Goschen s country estate Seacox Hawkhurst in December 1905 10 Lady Milner took over as editor of the family owned conservative journal The National Review after the death of her brother Leopold Maxse in 1932 having supported the publication since he fell ill in 1929 11 The magazine was known for its opposition to imperial Germany prior to the First World War and to appeasement in the interwar years Its editor was staunchly defended by Conservative leader Bonar Law 12 In January 1917 French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau speaking to President Raymond Poincare famously said of Lord Milner He is an old friend of mine We admired and loved the same woman That s an indissoluble bond 13 Viscountess Milner was present in France on 11 November 1933 the 15th anniversary of the Armistice where she dedicated a marble bust of her late husband Alfred in a conference room on the second floor of Doullens Town Hall It was here at Lord Milner s urging in a conference attended by Clemenceau Poincare and French and English Generals on 26 March 1918 that the Western Front was united under a single command in World War I Today Doullens Town Hall bears the inscription In this town hall on the 26th of March 1918 the Allies entrusted General Foch with the supreme command on the Western Front This decision saved France and the liberty of the world 14 Per Supreme War Cabinet Secretary Leopold Amery the decision to appoint General Foch was made a day earlier in a meeting between Lord Milner and Prime Minister Clemenceau 15 As General Foch was not on the list of Clemenceau s promotable generals he was out of favor 16 Lord Milner s influence with Clemenceau made the decision easy On 20 April 1918 in his first public statement after being appointed Secretary of State for War Lord Milner said in The Temps The Times newspaper of France Our fighters are worthy of the test they face Attacked by divisions far more numerous than ours they supplement the number by courage and they decimate the assailant We are happy to see our French allies doing them justice I have not waited until now neither to understand the usefulness of a single command nor to recognize the value of General Foch I was personally associated with the measures which created the current organization of the command and I congratulate myself on the cordial confidence which has constantly reigned between Mr Clemenceau and myself It is not in vain that we will have shared the same anxieties fraternally then the same joys The days in which we are living create imperishable bonds 17 Violet discussed her family s long time friendship with Georges Clemenceau in The National Review and in her book Clemenceau Intime 18 19 She died on 10 October 1958 aged 86 at her home near Hawkhurst Family EditShe married firstly Lord Edward Cecil the youngest son of Prime Minister Salisbury on 18 June 1894 at St Saviour s Church Chelsea The officiant was his brother Rev William Cecil A wide range of society guests appeared at the wedding Asquith Morley and Chamberlain as well as his cousin Balfour and father Salisbury and liberal poets Blunt and Wilde His mother Lady Salisbury remarked It will be good for Nigs to have a clever wife and one accustomed to taking care of expenses and I hope will convert her I don t believe in pious pagans and my only real objection to the Souls is their heathenry His father warned him about her character and settled a further 1 000 pa having settled his debts again Lord Edward earned 200 pa in Army pay but his wife s contribution was double that making their life comfortable Salisbury urged them to work on their relationship but the marriage was unhappy She and Lord Edward Cecil had two children One son George Edward Gascoyne Cecil born on 9 September 1895 He was a Lieutenant in the Grenadier Guards and was killed in action in the First World War on 1 September 1914 on the Western Front Rudyard Kipling Georges Clemenceau and former President Theodore Roosevelt helped her track down his fate 20 One daughter Helen Mary Gascoyne Cecil who was born on 11 May 1901 She was an author She married Alexander Hardinge 2nd Baron Hardinge of Penshurst and died in 1979 Lady Edward Cecil was appointed Grand Dame of the Order of St John and Chevalier of the Legion d honneur 21 Lord Edward died on 13 December 1918 of the Spanish influenza and she married Lord Milner on 26 February 1921 11 Lady Edward and Lord Milner were married 12 days after Lord Milner s retirement from Prime Minister Lloyd George s government on 14 February 1921 They had a great marriage On 22 May 1928 she turned over important information relating to the First World War and Lord Milner s role at the Doullens Conference in France to the Public Records Office Upon Lord Milner s death in May 1925 Violet inherited nearly 46 000 2 8 million in 2020 22 In 1929 she donated Sturry Court Milner s residence in Canterbury to The King s School Canterbury The site now houses the Junior Kings School a She continued to maintain Great Wigsell her manor home in Salehurst and 13 Manchester Square their joint house in London Notes Edit Although some sources suggest Lady Milner sold the estate to the school a letter from George Bell Dean of Canterbury appears to confirm it was a donation I need not tell you again how grateful we are or how much we appreciate the gift both of itself and for the traditions and hopes which it contains 23 References Edit Obituary Viscountess Milner Brilliant Talker and Hostess The Times 11 October 1958 p 8 The Times 6 30 00 pg 8 Mosley Charles ed 2003 Burke s Peerage Baronetage amp Knighthood 107 ed Burke s Peerage amp Gentry pp 351 352 ISBN 0 9711966 2 1 Sir Edward Coley Burne Jones Bt A R A R W S 1833 1898 Portrait study of Olive Maxse probably for The Sirens Christie s Retrieved 18 May 2019 Hoschschild Adam To End All Wars pg 28 Cecil Hugh amp Mirabel Imperial Marriage pg 99 London Gazette 17 Oct 1899 pg 6262 Thompson J L Forgotten Patriot pgs 143 145 Cecil Hugh Cecil Mirabel 2005 Imperial Marriage An Edwardian War and Peace History Press ISBN 978 0 7509 3799 3 O Brien Terence Milner pg 230 a b Cecil Hugh Milner Violet Georgina Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 35039 Subscription or UK public library membership required Beaverbrook Lord The Decline and Fall of Lloyd George New York Duell 1963 pgs 194 195 Thompson pg 334 Aston George The Biography of the Late Marshal Foch pgs 285 286 Amery Leopold My Political Life Vol II pgs 146 147 Clemenceau Georges Grandeur and Misery of Victory pg 39 The Temps Declarations de Lord Milner 20 April 1918 pg 1 The National Review Vol CXV Clemenceau pgs 41 46 Review of the Two Worlds Clemenceau Intime pgs 611 619 Hochschild pgs 119 122 My Picture Gallery ed National Review 1932 48 O Brien pg 389 Junior King s Celebrates 90 Years at Milner Court The OKS Association Retrieved 29 September 2022 Primary sources Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Violet Milner Viscountess Milner Wikimedia Commons has media related to Violet Milner Viscountess Milner Wikisource has original works by or about Violet Milner Viscountess Milner The Times of London archive website Beaverbrook Lord The Decline and Fall of Lloyd George New York Duell Sloan 1963 The London Gazette Milner Violet Viscountess Milner My Picture Gallery 1886 1901 London John Murray 1951 O Brien Terence Milner London Constable 1979 Thompson J Lee Forgotten Patriot A life of Alfred Viscount Milner of St James s and Cape Town 1854 1925 Cranbury NJ Rosemont Publishing 2007 Hochschild Adam To End All Wars A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion 1914 1918 Boston Houghton 2011 Cecil Hugh amp Mirabel Imperial Marriage London Murray 2002 Aston George The Biography of the Late Marshal Foch New York MacMillan 1929 Amery Leopold My Political Life Volume II War and Peace 1914 1929 London Hutchinson 1953 The Temps French newspaper Digital Archives Link The National Review Vol 115 July to December 1940 Clemenceau London The Proprietors 1940 Review Des Mondes 15 February 1953 Clemenceau Intime Paris Revue des Deux Mondes 1953 pdf Clemenceau Georges Grandeur and Misery of Victory New York Harcourt 1930External links EditViolet Milner Papers at the Bodleian Library Foucart Pierre Doullens The Room of Single Command This article about a writer or poet from the United Kingdom is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte This biographical article about a print editor is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte This biography of a viscount in the peerage of the United Kingdom is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Violet Milner Viscountess Milner amp oldid 1135136730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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