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William Jowitt, 1st Earl Jowitt

William Allen Jowitt, 1st Earl Jowitt, PC (15 April 1885 – 16 August 1957) was a British Liberal Party, National Labour and then Labour Party politician and lawyer who served as Lord Chancellor under Clement Attlee from 1945 to 1951.

The Earl Jowitt
Jowitt in 1940
Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain
In office
27 July 1945 – 26 October 1951
Prime MinisterClement Attlee
Preceded byThe Viscount Simon
Succeeded byThe Lord Simonds
Personal details
Born(1885-04-15)15 April 1885
Stevenage, Hertfordshire, England
Died16 August 1957(1957-08-16) (aged 72)
Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, England
Political party
Spouse
Lesley McIntyre
(m. 1913)
Alma materNew College, Oxford
Arms of Jowitt: Azure, on a chevron argent between two chaplets of oak in chief and a lion sejant guardant in base or three bugle-horns stringed sable; crest: A lion sejant guardant gules the dexter forepaw supporting an escutcheon of the arms; supporters: On either side a spaniel with a Chancellor's Purse proper that on the dexter charged with a rose argent and that on the sinister with a rose gules both barbed and seeded also proper suspended from the neck by a cord or; motto: Tenax et Fidelis

Background and education Edit

He was born in Stevenage, Hertfordshire, the son of Reverend William Jowitt, Rector of Stevenage, by his wife Louisa Margaret Allen.

At the age of nine, he was sent to Northaw Place, a preparatory school in Potters Bar, Middlesex, where he first met and was looked after by fellow student Clement Attlee, the future Labour Party Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.

From Northaw, he went to Marlborough College, then to New College, Oxford where he studied law. He was admitted to the Middle Temple on 15 November 1906 and was called to the Bar on 23 June 1909.[1]

Legal and political career (1922–1931) Edit

Jowitt became a member of chambers in Brick Court in London. He proved himself a skilled advocate, attracting attention for his subdued and charming manner when barristers were more inclined to browbeat witnesses. He became a King's Counsel the day before the 1922 general election in which he was elected Member of Parliament (MP) for The Hartlepools. Jowitt was a member of the faction of the Liberal Party led by H. H. Asquith and somewhat radical in his beliefs. He continued to practise law whilst a backbench MP and was not considered a great orator in the House of Commons.

Jowitt was re-elected, now part of the re-united Liberal Party, at the 1923 general election, and in 1924, he was a member of the Royal Commission on Lunacy. He lost his seat in the 1924 general election. Jowitt stood successfully in Preston in the 1929 general election, again elected as a Liberal. Following the formation of a minority Labour government, he was offered the position of attorney general by the new prime minister, Ramsay MacDonald.

Labour had few experienced lawyers in its ranks in Parliament and had experienced problems filling the positions of legal officers in its first government. Jowitt agreed, but resigned his seat and stood again as a candidate for the Labour Party. At the by-election in July 1929, Preston re-elected him with an increased majority. As was customary, Jowitt received a knighthood upon becoming attorney general. His work mainly concerned the drafting of government bills, particularly the reversal of the Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act 1927.

As was still the custom for the attorney general, he occasionally prosecuted in high-profile cases, notably Sidney Harry Fox, charged with murdering his mother by suffocating her and then setting fire to her hotel room. It was said that a single question from Jowitt ("Explain to me why you shut the door?") sealed Fox's fate since Fox could think of no convincing answer.

Divided loyalties (1931–1939) Edit

When the Labour government split over the financial crisis in 1931, Jowitt was one of only a handful of Labour MPs to follow MacDonald into the National Government. He was uncomfortable in a coalition with the Conservatives but believed that the proposed spending cuts causing the split were necessary, and the coalition was necessary to force them through. Like others who joined the National Government, he was expelled from the Labour Party.

He was made a Privy Councillor but found himself in a difficult electoral position when he could not secure the withdrawal of the Conservative candidate in Preston in the 1931 general election. He thus stood instead as the National Labour candidate for the Combined English Universities, but there too, he competed with other candidates supporting the National Government and was defeated. MacDonald persuaded Jowitt to remain as Attorney General in the hope that a new seat could be found to maintain the handful of National Labour positions in the government, but that proved impossible and Jowitt stepped down. He was replaced as Attorney General in January 1932 and returned to the Bar. Though relatively new to the party, Jowitt greatly regretted the split with Labour. He remained close to MacDonald, but after Stanley Baldwin became Prime Minister in 1935, Jowitt began campaigning for Labour.

A number of constituency Labour Parties attempted to nominate him as their candidate for the general election that year, but he was still expelled. Unable to stand for Labour, he refused to stand for any other party or as an independent.

Jowitt was readmitted to the Labour Party in November 1936. Still a public figure, he was a critic of the National Government's policy of appeasement, and in 1937, he called for the state control of the arms industry and rapid rearmament to face the growing threat of fascism on the Continent.

In February 1939 he called for the recreation of the Ministry of Munitions. In October, he was adopted as Labour's candidate at a by-election in Ashton-under-Lyne and was duly elected, unusually unopposed.[2]

Churchill ministry (1940–1945) Edit

Eight months later, Winston Churchill appointed Jowitt as Solicitor General in his coalition government. Jowitt dispensed legal advice to the government for two years in World War II before he was placed in charge of planning for reconstruction. He also held Cabinet positions that were mostly sinecures such as Paymaster General and then Minister without Portfolio in that role.

In 1944, he became Minister of National Insurance at the head of a new government department. He resigned from the government when Labour left the coalition in May 1945, after Victory in Europe Day, and he was re-elected for Ashton-under-Lyne in the general election in July.

Lord Chancellor (1945–1951) Edit

After a landslide victory in the 1945 election, Labour formed its first majority government. Prime Minister Clement Attlee appointed Jowitt as Lord Chancellor. As soon as he was appointed, Jowitt met with US Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson to resolve outstanding points of contention over the draft London Charter, which would govern the procedures of the Nuremberg Trials. He retained the Conservative MP and outgoing Attorney General, Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, as the official liaison but indicated that the new Attorney General, Sir Hartley Shawcross, would serve as Britain's Chief Prosecutor in the trials themselves.

Jowitt introduced and saw signed the United Nations Act 1946, the legislation that governs how the UK subordinates itself to the UN.[3][4]

He was raised to the peerage as Baron Jowitt, of Stevenage in the County of Hertford, on 2 August 1945 and entered the House of Lords.[5] He led much important judicial legislation during the life of the Labour government.

Jowitt was also responsible for some key changes to the legal culture in Britain. He attempted to end political and social imbalances in the Magistrates Courts and is considered to have been the first Lord Chancellor to adopt a policy of appointing judges purely on the basis of merit.[citation needed]

As Lord Chancellor, he also served as speaker of the House of Lords, a delicate job given the Conservative majority in the Lords. Christopher Addison, Labour's leader in the Lords, died shortly after the party's defeat in the 1951 general election.

Labour was now in opposition, and Jowitt took over as leader of the Labour peers. He was created Viscount Jowitt, of Stevenage in the County of Hertford, on 20 January 1947,[6] and was awarded an earldom by Attlee in the 1951 Prime Minister's Resignation Honours,[7] being created Viscount Stevenage, of Stevenage in the County of Hertford and Earl Jowitt on 24 January 1952.[8]

Later political life Edit

A senior figure in the party, and a member of the Shadow Cabinet, Jowitt was careful to keep the Labour peers out of the conflict between the Bevanites and Gaitskellites in the early 1950s. The opposition to the Conservative government in the Lords was meagre but sometimes successfully rallied support from government backbenchers.

In 1955, for instance, Jowitt led a successful rebellion in the Lords over a government bill to criminalise the medical use of marijuana. Jowitt was a prominent spokesperson against human rights abuses during the suppression of the Mau Mau Uprising in Kenya, teaming up with the Archbishop of Canterbury to launch a review of the circumstances surrounding the resignation of Colonel Arthur Young as Commissioner of Police in the colony.[9] He stood down as leader in November 1955, at the age of 70.

Family Edit

Jowitt married Lesley McIntyre, a daughter of James Patrick McIntyre, in 1913. He died at Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, in August 1957, aged 72. His peerages did not survive his death, as he had no male heirs.

Publications Edit

Jowitt wrote two books on espionage and compiled a legal dictionary, which was published posthumously in 1959, completed by Clifford Walsh, and became a standard reference work. It remains in print as Jowitt's Dictionary of English Law.[10]

  • The Strange Case of Alger Hiss (1953. London: Hodder & Stoughton)
  • Some Were Spies (1954. London: Hodder & Stoughton)
  • Dictionary of English Law (1959. London: Sweet & Maxwell)

References Edit

  1. ^ Williamson, J.B. (1937). The Middle Temple Bench Book. 2nd edition, p. 290.
  2. ^ Kay Halle, The Irrepressible Churchill, (Robson Books, 1966), 44
  3. ^ supremecourt.uk: HM Treasury v Ahmad, etc, 27 Jan 2010
  4. ^ Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Vol. 139. House of Lords. 12 February 1946. col. 373.
  5. ^ "No. 37208". The London Gazette. 3 August 1945. p. 3981.
  6. ^ "No. 37860". The London Gazette. 21 January 1947. p. 411.
  7. ^ The Times, Friday, 30 November 1951; pg. 6; Issue 52172; col G: "The Resignation Honours: Earldom For Lord Jowitt"
  8. ^ "No. 39433". The London Gazette. 4 January 1952. p. 136.
  9. ^ Elkins, C. (2005) Britain's Gulag: The Brutal End of Empire in Kenya, Pimlico: London
  10. ^ London: Sweet & Maxwell. ISBN 9780414051140

External links Edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by William Jowitt
  • UK Parliamentary Archives, Correspondence and papers of Sir William Allen Jowitt, Earl Jowitt, 1885-1957
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for The Hartlepools
19221924
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Tom Shaw
Alfred Kennedy
Member of Parliament for Preston
19291931
With: Tom Shaw
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Ashton-under-Lyne
19391945
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Attorney-General for England
1929–1932
Succeeded by
Preceded by Solicitor-General for England
1940–1942
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Paymaster General
1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain
1945–1951
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Labour Party in the House of Lords
1952–1955
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Earl Jowitt
1951–1957
Extinct
Viscount Jowitt
1947–1957
Baron Jowitt
1946–1957

william, jowitt, earl, jowitt, william, allen, jowitt, earl, jowitt, april, 1885, august, 1957, british, liberal, party, national, labour, then, labour, party, politician, lawyer, served, lord, chancellor, under, clement, attlee, from, 1945, 1951, right, honou. William Allen Jowitt 1st Earl Jowitt PC 15 April 1885 16 August 1957 was a British Liberal Party National Labour and then Labour Party politician and lawyer who served as Lord Chancellor under Clement Attlee from 1945 to 1951 The Right HonourableThe Earl JowittPCJowitt in 1940Lord High Chancellor of Great BritainIn office 27 July 1945 26 October 1951Prime MinisterClement AttleePreceded byThe Viscount SimonSucceeded byThe Lord SimondsPersonal detailsBorn 1885 04 15 15 April 1885Stevenage Hertfordshire EnglandDied16 August 1957 1957 08 16 aged 72 Bury St Edmunds Suffolk EnglandPolitical partyLabour National Labour LiberalSpouseLesley McIntyre m 1913 wbr Alma materNew College OxfordArms of Jowitt Azure on a chevron argent between two chaplets of oak in chief and a lion sejant guardant in base or three bugle horns stringed sable crest A lion sejant guardant gules the dexter forepaw supporting an escutcheon of the arms supporters On either side a spaniel with a Chancellor s Purse proper that on the dexter charged with a rose argent and that on the sinister with a rose gules both barbed and seeded also proper suspended from the neck by a cord or motto Tenax et Fidelis Contents 1 Background and education 2 Legal and political career 1922 1931 3 Divided loyalties 1931 1939 4 Churchill ministry 1940 1945 5 Lord Chancellor 1945 1951 6 Later political life 7 Family 8 Publications 9 References 10 External linksBackground and education EditHe was born in Stevenage Hertfordshire the son of Reverend William Jowitt Rector of Stevenage by his wife Louisa Margaret Allen At the age of nine he was sent to Northaw Place a preparatory school in Potters Bar Middlesex where he first met and was looked after by fellow student Clement Attlee the future Labour Party Prime Minister of the United Kingdom From Northaw he went to Marlborough College then to New College Oxford where he studied law He was admitted to the Middle Temple on 15 November 1906 and was called to the Bar on 23 June 1909 1 Legal and political career 1922 1931 EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jowitt became a member of chambers in Brick Court in London He proved himself a skilled advocate attracting attention for his subdued and charming manner when barristers were more inclined to browbeat witnesses He became a King s Counsel the day before the 1922 general election in which he was elected Member of Parliament MP for The Hartlepools Jowitt was a member of the faction of the Liberal Party led by H H Asquith and somewhat radical in his beliefs He continued to practise law whilst a backbench MP and was not considered a great orator in the House of Commons Jowitt was re elected now part of the re united Liberal Party at the 1923 general election and in 1924 he was a member of the Royal Commission on Lunacy He lost his seat in the 1924 general election Jowitt stood successfully in Preston in the 1929 general election again elected as a Liberal Following the formation of a minority Labour government he was offered the position of attorney general by the new prime minister Ramsay MacDonald Labour had few experienced lawyers in its ranks in Parliament and had experienced problems filling the positions of legal officers in its first government Jowitt agreed but resigned his seat and stood again as a candidate for the Labour Party At the by election in July 1929 Preston re elected him with an increased majority As was customary Jowitt received a knighthood upon becoming attorney general His work mainly concerned the drafting of government bills particularly the reversal of the Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act 1927 As was still the custom for the attorney general he occasionally prosecuted in high profile cases notably Sidney Harry Fox charged with murdering his mother by suffocating her and then setting fire to her hotel room It was said that a single question from Jowitt Explain to me why you shut the door sealed Fox s fate since Fox could think of no convincing answer Divided loyalties 1931 1939 EditWhen the Labour government split over the financial crisis in 1931 Jowitt was one of only a handful of Labour MPs to follow MacDonald into the National Government He was uncomfortable in a coalition with the Conservatives but believed that the proposed spending cuts causing the split were necessary and the coalition was necessary to force them through Like others who joined the National Government he was expelled from the Labour Party He was made a Privy Councillor but found himself in a difficult electoral position when he could not secure the withdrawal of the Conservative candidate in Preston in the 1931 general election He thus stood instead as the National Labour candidate for the Combined English Universities but there too he competed with other candidates supporting the National Government and was defeated MacDonald persuaded Jowitt to remain as Attorney General in the hope that a new seat could be found to maintain the handful of National Labour positions in the government but that proved impossible and Jowitt stepped down He was replaced as Attorney General in January 1932 and returned to the Bar Though relatively new to the party Jowitt greatly regretted the split with Labour He remained close to MacDonald but after Stanley Baldwin became Prime Minister in 1935 Jowitt began campaigning for Labour A number of constituency Labour Parties attempted to nominate him as their candidate for the general election that year but he was still expelled Unable to stand for Labour he refused to stand for any other party or as an independent Jowitt was readmitted to the Labour Party in November 1936 Still a public figure he was a critic of the National Government s policy of appeasement and in 1937 he called for the state control of the arms industry and rapid rearmament to face the growing threat of fascism on the Continent In February 1939 he called for the recreation of the Ministry of Munitions In October he was adopted as Labour s candidate at a by election in Ashton under Lyne and was duly elected unusually unopposed 2 Churchill ministry 1940 1945 EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Eight months later Winston Churchill appointed Jowitt as Solicitor General in his coalition government Jowitt dispensed legal advice to the government for two years in World War II before he was placed in charge of planning for reconstruction He also held Cabinet positions that were mostly sinecures such as Paymaster General and then Minister without Portfolio in that role In 1944 he became Minister of National Insurance at the head of a new government department He resigned from the government when Labour left the coalition in May 1945 after Victory in Europe Day and he was re elected for Ashton under Lyne in the general election in July Lord Chancellor 1945 1951 EditAfter a landslide victory in the 1945 election Labour formed its first majority government Prime Minister Clement Attlee appointed Jowitt as Lord Chancellor As soon as he was appointed Jowitt met with US Supreme Court Justice Robert H Jackson to resolve outstanding points of contention over the draft London Charter which would govern the procedures of the Nuremberg Trials He retained the Conservative MP and outgoing Attorney General Sir David Maxwell Fyfe as the official liaison but indicated that the new Attorney General Sir Hartley Shawcross would serve as Britain s Chief Prosecutor in the trials themselves Jowitt introduced and saw signed the United Nations Act 1946 the legislation that governs how the UK subordinates itself to the UN 3 4 He was raised to the peerage as Baron Jowitt of Stevenage in the County of Hertford on 2 August 1945 and entered the House of Lords 5 He led much important judicial legislation during the life of the Labour government Jowitt was also responsible for some key changes to the legal culture in Britain He attempted to end political and social imbalances in the Magistrates Courts and is considered to have been the first Lord Chancellor to adopt a policy of appointing judges purely on the basis of merit citation needed As Lord Chancellor he also served as speaker of the House of Lords a delicate job given the Conservative majority in the Lords Christopher Addison Labour s leader in the Lords died shortly after the party s defeat in the 1951 general election Labour was now in opposition and Jowitt took over as leader of the Labour peers He was created Viscount Jowitt of Stevenage in the County of Hertford on 20 January 1947 6 and was awarded an earldom by Attlee in the 1951 Prime Minister s Resignation Honours 7 being created Viscount Stevenage of Stevenage in the County of Hertford and Earl Jowitt on 24 January 1952 8 Later political life EditA senior figure in the party and a member of the Shadow Cabinet Jowitt was careful to keep the Labour peers out of the conflict between the Bevanites and Gaitskellites in the early 1950s The opposition to the Conservative government in the Lords was meagre but sometimes successfully rallied support from government backbenchers In 1955 for instance Jowitt led a successful rebellion in the Lords over a government bill to criminalise the medical use of marijuana Jowitt was a prominent spokesperson against human rights abuses during the suppression of the Mau Mau Uprising in Kenya teaming up with the Archbishop of Canterbury to launch a review of the circumstances surrounding the resignation of Colonel Arthur Young as Commissioner of Police in the colony 9 He stood down as leader in November 1955 at the age of 70 Family EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jowitt married Lesley McIntyre a daughter of James Patrick McIntyre in 1913 He died at Bury St Edmunds Suffolk in August 1957 aged 72 His peerages did not survive his death as he had no male heirs Publications EditJowitt wrote two books on espionage and compiled a legal dictionary which was published posthumously in 1959 completed by Clifford Walsh and became a standard reference work It remains in print as Jowitt s Dictionary of English Law 10 The Strange Case of Alger Hiss 1953 London Hodder amp Stoughton Some Were Spies 1954 London Hodder amp Stoughton Dictionary of English Law 1959 London Sweet amp Maxwell References Edit Williamson J B 1937 The Middle Temple Bench Book 2nd edition p 290 Kay Halle The Irrepressible Churchill Robson Books 1966 44 supremecourt uk HM Treasury v Ahmad etc 27 Jan 2010 Parliamentary Debates Hansard Vol 139 House of Lords 12 February 1946 col 373 No 37208 The London Gazette 3 August 1945 p 3981 No 37860 The London Gazette 21 January 1947 p 411 The Times Friday 30 November 1951 pg 6 Issue 52172 col G The Resignation Honours Earldom For Lord Jowitt No 39433 The London Gazette 4 January 1952 p 136 Elkins C 2005 Britain s Gulag The Brutal End of Empire in Kenya Pimlico London London Sweet amp Maxwell ISBN 9780414051140External links EditHansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by William Jowitt UK Parliamentary Archives Correspondence and papers of Sir William Allen Jowitt Earl Jowitt 1885 1957Parliament of the United KingdomPreceded byW G Howard Gritten Member of Parliament for The Hartlepools1922 1924 Succeeded bySir Wilfrid SugdenPreceded byTom ShawAlfred Kennedy Member of Parliament for Preston1929 1931 With Tom Shaw Succeeded byAdrian MoreingWilliam KirkpatrickPreceded byFred Simpson Member of Parliament for Ashton under Lyne1939 1945 Succeeded byHervey RhodesLegal officesPreceded byThomas Inskip Attorney General for England1929 1932 Succeeded byThomas InskipPreceded byTerence O Connor Solicitor General for England1940 1942 Succeeded byDavid Maxwell FyfePolitical officesPreceded byThe Lord Hankey Paymaster General1942 Succeeded byThe Lord CherwellPreceded byThe Viscount Simon Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain1945 1951 Succeeded byThe Lord SimondsParty political officesPreceded byThe Viscount Addison Leader of the Labour Party in the House of Lords1952 1955 Succeeded byThe Earl Alexander of HillsboroughPeerage of the United KingdomNew creation Earl Jowitt1951 1957 ExtinctViscount Jowitt1947 1957Baron Jowitt1946 1957Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Politics nbsp Law nbsp United KingdomWilliam Jowitt 1st Earl Jowitt at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Jowitt 1st Earl Jowitt amp oldid 1175683771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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