Henry Campbell-Bannerman

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The Rt Hon. Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
Henry Campbell-Bannerman

In office
5 December 1905 – 3 April 1908
Preceded by Arthur Balfour
Succeeded by Herbert Henry Asquith

Born 7 September 1836
Kelvinside, Glasgow, Scotland
Died 22 April 1908
10 Downing Street, Whitehall, London
Political party Liberal

Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman (7 September 183622 April 1908) was a British Liberal statesman who served as Prime Minister from December 5, 1905 until resigning due to ill health on April 3, 1908. No previous First Lord of the Treasury had been officially called "Prime Minister"; this term only came into official usage after he took office.

Campbell-Bannerman was born at Kelvinside House in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1836 as Henry Campbell. The surname Bannerman was added to his surname in 1871 as required by his maternal uncle's will. It was a condition of his inheritance of his uncle's Kent estate, Hunton Court.

He was the son of Sir James Campbell, who was Lord Provost of Glasgow 1840-1843, and his wife Janet Bannerman. Campbell-Bannerman was educated at Glasgow High School (1845-1847), the University of Glasgow (1851), and Trinity College, Cambridge (1854-1858), where he achieved a Third-Class Degree in Classical Tripos. After graduating, he joined J.& W. Campbell & Co., his family's firm, who were warehousemen and drapers in Glasgow.

In 1868, he was elected to the House of Commons as Liberal Member of Parliament for Stirling Burghs - a constituency he was to represent for forty years.

He was appointed as Financial Secretary to the War Office in November 1871, serving in this position until 1874, and again from 1880 to 1882. After serving as Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty from 1882 to 1884, he entered Gladstone's second cabinet as Chief Secretary for Ireland in 1884.

In Gladstone's Third (1886) and Fourth (1892-1894) Cabinets and Rosebery's Government (1894-1895) he served as Secretary of State for War, where his most notable accomplishment was persuading the Duke of Cambridge, the Queen's cousin, an obstacle to necessary army reforms, to resign as Commander-in-Chief. This earned Campbell-Bannerman a knighthood. In 1898 Sir Henry succeeded Sir William Vernon Harcourt as leader of the Liberals in the House of Commons. Campbell-Bannerman had a difficult job holding together the strongly divided party, and when the Liberals returned to power in 1905, he became Prime Minister.

Campbell-Bannerman's premiership was a frustrating one, as the Conservative Lords blocked most of the Liberals' reform measures, but it did see the achievement of an Entente with Russia in 1907 by his Foreign Secretary, Sir Edward Grey. In that same year, Campbell-Bannerman achieved the honour of becoming the Father of the House, the only serving British Prime Minister to do so to date. But his health soon took a turn for the worse, and he resigned as Prime Minister on 3 April 1908, to be succeeded by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Herbert Henry Asquith. Campbell-Bannerman remained in residence at 10 Downing Street in the immediate aftermath of his resignation, and became the only Prime Minister to die there, on 22 April 1908.

His last words were "This is not the end of me." [1]. Campbell-Bannerman was buried in the churchyard of Meigle Parish Church, Perthshire, near his home, Belmont Castle. There is a blue plaque outside his house at 6 Grosvenor Place, London SW1.

[edit] Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman's Government, December 1905 - April 1908

Blue plaque at 6 Grosvenor Place, London
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Blue plaque at 6 Grosvenor Place, London
Arms of Henry Campbell-Bannerman
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Arms of Henry Campbell-Bannerman

[edit] Changes

[edit] Political offices

Political offices
Preceded by
George Otto Trevelyan
Chief Secretary for Ireland
1884–1885
Succeeded by
Sir William Hart Dyke
Preceded by
The Viscount Cranbrook
War Secretary
1886
Succeeded by
William Henry Smith
Preceded by
Edward Stanhope
War Secretary
1892–1895
Succeeded by
The Marquess of Lansdowne
Preceded by
Sir William Harcourt
Leader of the Opposition
1899–1905
Succeeded by
Arthur Balfour
Preceded by
Sir William Harcourt
Leader of the British Liberal Party
1899–1908
Succeeded by
Herbert Henry Asquith
Preceded by
Arthur James Balfour
Leader of the House of Commons
1906–1908
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
1906–1908
Preceded by
George Henry Finch
Father of the House
1907–1908
Succeeded by
John Kennaway

[edit] External links

Wikisource
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Leaders of the Liberal Party
  1859-1916  House of Lords: Granville | Russell | Granville | Kimberley | Rosebery | Kimberley | Ripon | Crewe
House of Commons: Palmerston | Gladstone | Hartington | Gladstone  | Harcourt | Campbell-Bannerman | Asquith
  1916-1988  Asquith | Maclean | Asquith | Lloyd George | Samuel | Sinclair | Davies | Grimond | Thorpe | Grimond | Steel