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Wilfrid Ashley, 1st Baron Mount Temple

Colonel Wilfrid William Ashley, 1st Baron Mount Temple, PC DL (13 September 1867 – 3 July 1939) was a British soldier and Conservative politician. He served as Minister of Transport between 1924 and 1929 under Stanley Baldwin.

The Lord Mount Temple
Minister for Transport
In office
11 November 1924 – 4 June 1929
MonarchGeorge V
Prime MinisterStanley Baldwin
Preceded byHarry Gosling
Succeeded byHerbert Morrison
Personal details
Born
Wilfrid William Ashley

13 September 1867 (1867-09-13)
Died3 July 1939 (1939-07-04) (aged 71)
Romsey, Hampshire
NationalityBritish
Political partyConservative
Spouses
Amalia Mary Maud Cassel
(m. 1901; died 1911)
(m. 1914)
ChildrenEdwina Mountbatten, Countess Mountbatten of Burma
Mary Cholmondeley, Lady Delamere
Parent(s)Evelyn Ashley
Sybella Charlotte Farquhar
Alma materMagdalen College, Oxford

Background and education edit

Ashley was the son of Hon. Evelyn Ashley, second surviving son of the social reformer Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury. His mother was Sybella Charlotte Farquhar, daughter of Sir Walter Farquhar, 3rd Baronet. William Cowper-Temple, 1st Baron Mount Temple, was his great-uncle. He was educated at Harrow and Magdalen College, Oxford.[1] He left Oxford without taking a degree, and then travelled widely, including in Africa and the Americas.

Military career edit

Ashley served in the Ayrshire militia (1886–9), then held an active commission in the regular army with the Grenadier Guards (1889–98), before returning to the militia when he was commissioned with the 3rd battalion of the Hampshire Regiment (1899–1902).[2] Though in the militia, he volunteered for active service in South Africa during the Second Boer War (1899–1902), but was invalided home. He resigned from the militia with the honorary rank of major in December 1902.[3]

Political career edit

Ashley's father was a Liberal Unionist and Ashley initially acted as private secretary to Sir Henry Campbell-Bannermann, beginning in 1899, when he was the leader of the opposition. After being invalided home from the South Africa in 1901, he congratulated Campbell-Bannermann on his "methods of barbarism" speech in June 1901.[2]

Ashley, who held the rank of colonel in the British Army,[4] was well known as an activist in various pressure groups before commencing his party political career. He was a leading figure in the Navy League and also set up the anti-state intervention No More Waste Committee during the First World War.[5] He was subsequently involved in the foundation of the Comrades of the Great War in 1917 and as President of the group helped to ensure that the ex-servicemen's movement was closely linked to the Conservative Party at its foundation.[6]

Ashley was elected to Parliament in 1906 to represent Blackpool, holding the seat until 1918 before subsequently sitting as member for Fylde until 1922 and New Forest from 1922 to 1932.[7] Ashley commanded the 20th battalion of the King's Regiment (Liverpool) in 1914 in the rank of lieutenant-colonel before returning to England in 1915 to become parliamentary private secretary to the financial secretary to the War Office.[2] Ashley, who owned Classiebawn Castle in southern Ireland, was a fierce opponent of Irish republicanism and wrote to David Lloyd George, then Prime Minister, in 1921 to ask for the protection of his Irish estates.[2]

He served under Bonar Law and Stanley Baldwin as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Transport and Parliamentary Secretary to the Office of Works from October 1922 until October 1923, when he was appointed Under-Secretary of State for War, which he remained until January 1924.[7] Ashley was sworn of the Privy Council in February 1924[8] and when the Conservatives returned to power under Baldwin in November of that year he was made Minister for Transport,[9] an office he retained until the fall of the Baldwin administration in 1929. He left the House of Commons in 1932 and was raised to the peerage as Baron Mount Temple, of Lee in the County of Southampton,[10] a revival of the title held by his great-uncle.

Lord Mount Temple remained active within the House of Lords and was a vocal supporter of the policy of appeasement towards Nazi Germany. He admired Adolf Hitler for his anti-communism, although much of his conviction rested on the belief that the Treaty of Versailles had been unjust to begin with and that it should be revised regardless of who was in government in Germany.[11] In 1935, in order to underline his support for the Germans, Lord Mount Temple was instrumental in establishing the Anglo-German Fellowship.[12] He served as chairman of both this group and Anti-Socialist Union simultaneously in the later 1930s.[13] In October 1938, after the Munich Agreement, he was among twenty-six signatories of a letter to The Times, calling the agreement "the rectification of one of the most flagrant injustices in the peace treaties".[2]

As AGF chairman, Lord Mount Temple (as he now was) visited Germany in mid-1937 and held a meeting with Hitler.[14] Unlike some of his contemporaries in the Fellowship, the laissez-faire capitalist Mount Temple did not support ideological Nazism (perhaps due in part to the fact that his first wife was Jewish). In the aftermath of Kristallnacht he resigned in protest from the chairmanship although his membership of the group continued.[15]

Personal life edit

 
Portrait of Mrs Wilfrid Ashley (née Muriel Emily ["Molly"] Spencer) by Philip de László, 1920

In 2008, the British historian Edward Feuchtwanger described Ashley as "a strikingly good-looking man, of military bearing, courteous and tactful, with strongly held, rather conventional views, sometimes regarded as reactionary".[2]

Lord Mount Temple married Amalia Mary Maud Cassel, daughter and only child of financier Sir Ernest Cassel, in early January, 1901.[1] Amongst the wedding guests was The Prince Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (the wedding taking place on 4 January, only eighteen days before Albert Edward became King-Emperor), who was a friend of Cassel.[16] The couple had two daughters:

Following his first wife's early death in 1911, he married in 1914 Muriel Emily ("Molly") Forbes-Sempill, the former wife of Rear-Admiral The Hon. Arthur Forbes-Sempill, daughter of The Rev. Walter Spencer of Fownhope Court, Herefordshire, and sister of Margery, Viscountess Greenwood.

Lady Mount Temple had an interest in interior decoration and floral design, which was then highly fashionable; she had a florist business named Flower Decorations.[citation needed] The couple commissioned the architect Oliver Hill to design two Westminster town houses, naming them both Gayfere House.[18] The first house, built at 12 Gayfere Street (1923–26),[19] had a drawing room completely decorated with gold leaf.[18] The second, at the corner of Gayfere Street and Great Peter Street (1929–32), was decorated in Art Deco style,[20] making much use of mirrored walls and ceilings, most famously in a bathroom called by the Press "Lady Mount Temple's Crystal Palace".[18] She died on 30 June 1954 at Culver House, Penshurst, Kent aged 73.

The family also owned Classiebawn Castle on the west coast of Ireland.

Lord Mount Temple collapsed and died following a recent diagnosis of Parkinson's disease at his home Broadlands in July 1939, aged 71, at which time the barony became extinct and the Broadlands estate passed to his eldest daughter Edwina Ashley, the wife of Lord Louis Mountbatten.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Lt.-Col. Wilfred William Ashley, 1st and last Baron Mount Temple", The Peerage, 18 August 2011
  2. ^ a b c d e f Feuchtwanger, E.  (3 January 2008). Ashley, Wilfrid William, Baron Mount Temple (1867–1939), politician. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 15 Nov. 2020, from https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-30471 .
  3. ^ "No. 27501". The London Gazette. 5 December 1902. p. 8443.
  4. ^ Christof Mauch, Thomas Zeller, The world beyond the windshield: roads and landscapes in the United States and Europe, Ohio University Press, 2008, p. 169
  5. ^ Frank McDonough, Neville Chamberlain, appeasement, and the British road to war, Manchester University Press, 1998, p. 96
  6. ^ Niall Barr, The lion and the poppy: British veterans, politics, and society, 1921-1939, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2005, pp. 12-13
  7. ^ a b Cameron Hazlehurst, Sally Whitehead, Christine Woodland, A guide to the papers of British cabinet ministers, 1900-1964, Cambridge University Press, 1996, p. 30
  8. ^ "No. 32910". The London Gazette. 22 February 1924. p. 1549.
  9. ^ "No. 32992". The London Gazette. 14 November 1924. p. 8241.
  10. ^ "No. 33790". The London Gazette. 15 January 1932. p. 346.
  11. ^ McDonough, Neville Chamberlain, pp. 96-97
  12. ^ McDonough, Neville Chamberlain, p. 97
  13. ^ Thomas P. Linehan, British Fascism, 1918-39: Parties, Ideology and Culture, Manchester University Press, 2000, p. 46
  14. ^ N. J. Crowson, Facing fascism: the Conservative party and the European dictators, 1935-1940, Routledge, 1997, p. 23
  15. ^ Crowson, Facing Fascism, p. 32
  16. ^ Sidney Lee, King Edward VII: A Biography, Part 2, Kessinger Publishing, 2004, p. 62
  17. ^ "Lady Delamere, Figure in Murder," New York Times. 5 September 1987.
  18. ^ a b c Powers, Alan (2008). The Twentieth Century House in Britain: From the Archives of Country Life. London: Aurum Press. pp. 38–41. ISBN 978-1-84513-012-1.
  19. ^ Powers, Alan (1989). Oliver Hill: Architect and Lover of Life 1887–1968. London: Mouton Publications. p. 65. ISBN 0-9514250-0-5.
  20. ^ Historic England. "North House and Gayfere House (1357066)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 19 February 2015.

External links edit

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Wilfrid Ashley, 1st Baron Mount Temple

wilfrid, ashley, baron, mount, temple, colonel, wilfrid, william, ashley, baron, mount, temple, september, 1867, july, 1939, british, soldier, conservative, politician, served, minister, transport, between, 1924, 1929, under, stanley, baldwin, colonel, right, . Colonel Wilfrid William Ashley 1st Baron Mount Temple PC DL 13 September 1867 3 July 1939 was a British soldier and Conservative politician He served as Minister of Transport between 1924 and 1929 under Stanley Baldwin Colonel The Right HonourableThe Lord Mount TemplePC DLMinister for TransportIn office 11 November 1924 4 June 1929MonarchGeorge VPrime MinisterStanley BaldwinPreceded byHarry GoslingSucceeded byHerbert MorrisonPersonal detailsBornWilfrid William Ashley13 September 1867 1867 09 13 Died3 July 1939 1939 07 04 aged 71 Romsey HampshireNationalityBritishPolitical partyConservativeSpousesAmalia Mary Maud Cassel m 1901 died 1911 wbr Muriel Emily Spencer m 1914 wbr ChildrenEdwina Mountbatten Countess Mountbatten of BurmaMary Cholmondeley Lady DelamereParent s Evelyn AshleySybella Charlotte FarquharAlma materMagdalen College Oxford Contents 1 Background and education 2 Military career 3 Political career 4 Personal life 5 References 6 External linksBackground and education editAshley was the son of Hon Evelyn Ashley second surviving son of the social reformer Anthony Ashley Cooper 7th Earl of Shaftesbury His mother was Sybella Charlotte Farquhar daughter of Sir Walter Farquhar 3rd Baronet William Cowper Temple 1st Baron Mount Temple was his great uncle He was educated at Harrow and Magdalen College Oxford 1 He left Oxford without taking a degree and then travelled widely including in Africa and the Americas Military career editAshley served in the Ayrshire militia 1886 9 then held an active commission in the regular army with the Grenadier Guards 1889 98 before returning to the militia when he was commissioned with the 3rd battalion of the Hampshire Regiment 1899 1902 2 Though in the militia he volunteered for active service in South Africa during the Second Boer War 1899 1902 but was invalided home He resigned from the militia with the honorary rank of major in December 1902 3 Political career editAshley s father was a Liberal Unionist and Ashley initially acted as private secretary to Sir Henry Campbell Bannermann beginning in 1899 when he was the leader of the opposition After being invalided home from the South Africa in 1901 he congratulated Campbell Bannermann on his methods of barbarism speech in June 1901 2 Ashley who held the rank of colonel in the British Army 4 was well known as an activist in various pressure groups before commencing his party political career He was a leading figure in the Navy League and also set up the anti state intervention No More Waste Committee during the First World War 5 He was subsequently involved in the foundation of the Comrades of the Great War in 1917 and as President of the group helped to ensure that the ex servicemen s movement was closely linked to the Conservative Party at its foundation 6 Ashley was elected to Parliament in 1906 to represent Blackpool holding the seat until 1918 before subsequently sitting as member for Fylde until 1922 and New Forest from 1922 to 1932 7 Ashley commanded the 20th battalion of the King s Regiment Liverpool in 1914 in the rank of lieutenant colonel before returning to England in 1915 to become parliamentary private secretary to the financial secretary to the War Office 2 Ashley who owned Classiebawn Castle in southern Ireland was a fierce opponent of Irish republicanism and wrote to David Lloyd George then Prime Minister in 1921 to ask for the protection of his Irish estates 2 He served under Bonar Law and Stanley Baldwin as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Transport and Parliamentary Secretary to the Office of Works from October 1922 until October 1923 when he was appointed Under Secretary of State for War which he remained until January 1924 7 Ashley was sworn of the Privy Council in February 1924 8 and when the Conservatives returned to power under Baldwin in November of that year he was made Minister for Transport 9 an office he retained until the fall of the Baldwin administration in 1929 He left the House of Commons in 1932 and was raised to the peerage as Baron Mount Temple of Lee in the County of Southampton 10 a revival of the title held by his great uncle Lord Mount Temple remained active within the House of Lords and was a vocal supporter of the policy of appeasement towards Nazi Germany He admired Adolf Hitler for his anti communism although much of his conviction rested on the belief that the Treaty of Versailles had been unjust to begin with and that it should be revised regardless of who was in government in Germany 11 In 1935 in order to underline his support for the Germans Lord Mount Temple was instrumental in establishing the Anglo German Fellowship 12 He served as chairman of both this group and Anti Socialist Union simultaneously in the later 1930s 13 In October 1938 after the Munich Agreement he was among twenty six signatories of a letter to The Times calling the agreement the rectification of one of the most flagrant injustices in the peace treaties 2 As AGF chairman Lord Mount Temple as he now was visited Germany in mid 1937 and held a meeting with Hitler 14 Unlike some of his contemporaries in the Fellowship the laissez faire capitalist Mount Temple did not support ideological Nazism perhaps due in part to the fact that his first wife was Jewish In the aftermath of Kristallnacht he resigned in protest from the chairmanship although his membership of the group continued 15 Personal life edit nbsp Portrait of Mrs Wilfrid Ashley nee Muriel Emily Molly Spencer by Philip de Laszlo 1920In 2008 the British historian Edward Feuchtwanger described Ashley as a strikingly good looking man of military bearing courteous and tactful with strongly held rather conventional views sometimes regarded as reactionary 2 Lord Mount Temple married Amalia Mary Maud Cassel daughter and only child of financier Sir Ernest Cassel in early January 1901 1 Amongst the wedding guests was The Prince Albert Edward Prince of Wales the wedding taking place on 4 January only eighteen days before Albert Edward became King Emperor who was a friend of Cassel 16 The couple had two daughters Edwina Countess Mountbatten of Burma 1901 1960 who married The 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma 1900 1979 Ruth Mary Cholmondeley Lady Delamere 1906 1986 who married Alec Cunningham Reid 1895 1977 in 1927 They divorced in 1940 She then married Major Ernest Laurie Gardner They divorced in 1943 In 1944 she married the 4th Baron Delamere 1900 1979 They divorced in 1955 17 Following his first wife s early death in 1911 he married in 1914 Muriel Emily Molly Forbes Sempill the former wife of Rear Admiral The Hon Arthur Forbes Sempill daughter of The Rev Walter Spencer of Fownhope Court Herefordshire and sister of Margery Viscountess Greenwood Lady Mount Temple had an interest in interior decoration and floral design which was then highly fashionable she had a florist business named Flower Decorations citation needed The couple commissioned the architect Oliver Hill to design two Westminster town houses naming them both Gayfere House 18 The first house built at 12 Gayfere Street 1923 26 19 had a drawing room completely decorated with gold leaf 18 The second at the corner of Gayfere Street and Great Peter Street 1929 32 was decorated in Art Deco style 20 making much use of mirrored walls and ceilings most famously in a bathroom called by the Press Lady Mount Temple s Crystal Palace 18 She died on 30 June 1954 at Culver House Penshurst Kent aged 73 The family also owned Classiebawn Castle on the west coast of Ireland Lord Mount Temple collapsed and died following a recent diagnosis of Parkinson s disease at his home Broadlands in July 1939 aged 71 at which time the barony became extinct and the Broadlands estate passed to his eldest daughter Edwina Ashley the wife of Lord Louis Mountbatten References edit a b Lt Col Wilfred William Ashley 1st and last Baron Mount Temple The Peerage 18 August 2011 a b c d e f Feuchtwanger E 3 January 2008 Ashley Wilfrid William Baron Mount Temple 1867 1939 politician Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Retrieved 15 Nov 2020 from https www oxforddnb com view 10 1093 ref odnb 9780198614128 001 0001 odnb 9780198614128 e 30471 No 27501 The London Gazette 5 December 1902 p 8443 Christof Mauch Thomas Zeller The world beyond the windshield roads and landscapes in the United States and Europe Ohio University Press 2008 p 169 Frank McDonough Neville Chamberlain appeasement and the British road to war Manchester University Press 1998 p 96 Niall Barr The lion and the poppy British veterans politics and society 1921 1939 Greenwood Publishing Group 2005 pp 12 13 a b Cameron Hazlehurst Sally Whitehead Christine Woodland A guide to the papers of British cabinet ministers 1900 1964 Cambridge University Press 1996 p 30 No 32910 The London Gazette 22 February 1924 p 1549 No 32992 The London Gazette 14 November 1924 p 8241 No 33790 The London Gazette 15 January 1932 p 346 McDonough Neville Chamberlain pp 96 97 McDonough Neville Chamberlain p 97 Thomas P Linehan British Fascism 1918 39 Parties Ideology and Culture Manchester University Press 2000 p 46 N J Crowson Facing fascism the Conservative party and the European dictators 1935 1940 Routledge 1997 p 23 Crowson Facing Fascism p 32 Sidney Lee King Edward VII A Biography Part 2 Kessinger Publishing 2004 p 62 Lady Delamere Figure in Murder New York Times 5 September 1987 a b c Powers Alan 2008 The Twentieth Century House in Britain From the Archives of Country Life London Aurum Press pp 38 41 ISBN 978 1 84513 012 1 Powers Alan 1989 Oliver Hill Architect and Lover of Life 1887 1968 London Mouton Publications p 65 ISBN 0 9514250 0 5 Historic England North House and Gayfere House 1357066 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 19 February 2015 External links editHansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Wilfrid Ashley 1st Baron Mount TempleParliament of the United KingdomPreceded byHenry Wilson Worsley Taylor Member of Parliament for Blackpool1906 1918 Succeeded byAlbert Lindsay ParkinsonNew constituency Member of Parliament for Fylde1918 1922 Succeeded byLord StanleyPreceded byWalter Perkins Member of Parliament for New Forest and Christchurch1922 1932 Succeeded byJohn Digby MillsPolitical officesPreceded byArthur Neal Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Transport1922 1923 Succeeded byJohn Moore BrabazonPreceded byHon Walter Guinness Under Secretary of State for War1923 1924 Succeeded byClement AttleePreceded byHarry Gosling Minister of Transport1924 1929 Succeeded byHerbert Morrison Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wilfrid Ashley 1st Baron Mount Temple amp oldid 1181696072, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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