Julian Amery, Baron Amery of Lustleigh
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Harold Julian Amery, Baron Amery of Lustleigh, PC (27 March 1919 – 3 September 1996) was a prominent British politician of the Conservative Party, who served as a Member of Parliament (MP) for 39 of the 42 years between 1950 and 1992. He was appointed to the Privy Council in 1960. He was created a life peer upon his retirement from the House of Commons in 1992. For three decades, he was a leading figure in the Conservative Monday Club.
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[edit] Family and education
Amery's father was Leo Amery, the prominent British statesman and Conservative politician.
One of Julian's brothers, John, was a dedicated anti-Communist, and was hanged for treason by the British government at the end of World War II for having gone to Germany, joined the Nazis, and organized the British Free Corps to fight alongside the Germans against the Soviet Union.
Julian Amery was educated at Eton College and Balliol College, Oxford. On 26 January 1950, he married Catherine Macmillan, a daughter of Harold Macmillan, though politically Amery was at odds with the elder Macmillan. Julian and Catherine had one son and three daughters. Julian was widowed in 1991.
[edit] Military service
Before World War II started, Amery was a war correspondent in the Spanish Civil War and later an attaché for the British Foreign Office in Belgrade. After the war began, he served in both the Royal Air Force (RAF) and the Army, eventually reaching the rank of Captain. He spent most of the war in the eastern Mediterranean (the Middle East, Malta, Yugoslavia), and served as Liaison Officer to the Albanian Resistance Movement in 1944. The following year, he went to China to work with General Carton de Wiart, then Prime Minister's Personal Representative to Generalissimo Chiang Kai Shek.
[edit] Political career
Amery won a Parliamentary seat in the first general election held after he returned to civilian life, in 1950. He was elected as the Conservative MP for Preston North, a seat he held until 1966.
While sitting for Preston North, Amery held a number of government offices, all in governments led by his father-in-law, now the Prime Minister. He began with two Under-Secretaryships of State: for War (1957-1958) and for the Colonies (1958-1960). He was then promoted to Secretary of State for Air (1960-1962), followed by a promotion to the Cabinet post of Minister of Aviation (1962-1964).
Amery lost his seat in 1966, but was elected again in 1969 for Brighton Pavilion, a seat he would hold until 1992, when he retired and was created a life peer as Baron Amery of Lustleigh, of Preston in the County of Lancashire and of Brighton in the County of East Sussex.
Under the Heath ministry, Amery held three sub-Cabinet posts: Minister for Public Works (1970-1972), Minister for Housing and Construction (1970-1972), and Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (1972-1974).
[edit] Monday Club
For 30 years Julian Amery was an active member and later a Patron of the Conservative Monday Club, where he became friendly with General Sir Walter Walker, subsequently writing the foreword for Walker's anti-Soviet book, The Next Domino. He had been Guest of Honour at the Club's Annual Dinner at the Cutlers' Hall, in 1963. In 1965, he wrote the foreword for Club activist Geoffrey Stewart-Smith's book, No Vision Here. On May Day 1970, he was one of the Club's principal speakers at their 'Law and Liberty' rally in Trafalgar Square, held in answer to the 'Stop the Seventy Tour' campaign, designed to stop the South African cricket tour.
Julian Amery was the Monday Club's Guest-of-Honour at their Annual Dinner held at the Savoy Hotel, London, in January 1974, and again at the dinner at the end of the Club's two-day Conference in Birmingham in March 1975.
[edit] Political views
He was, for a time, in favour of entry to the European Common Market, and also of the nuclear deterrent, both causes of some discord between himself and his old friend Enoch Powell. He was, however, regarded by most as an Imperialist, and his father Leo noted at the time of the Suez crisis that "only Julian and Enoch Powell felt sufficiently strongly about the issue to go to the point of risking the government's existence".
In 1963, Amery took charge of Quintin Hogg's (Lord Hailsham) campaign for leadership of the Conservative Party. [cf.Heffer, 189; 324].
In early 1975, he took part in a House of Commons debate on the Trades Unions Congress's invitation to Alexander Shelepin, the former Soviet KGB Chief, to visit Britain. He stated that "more and more people are beginning to look upon the TUC as a Communist-penetrated show and this invitation must strengthen that view."
According to Margaret Thatcher (in her 1995 memoirs The Path to Power), when Harold Wilson's Labour government proposed devolution for Scotland in 1976, "Julian Amery and Maurice Macmillan proved effective leaders of the anti-devolution Tory camp."
Although he was Macmillan's son-in-law, he failed to defend him when Count Nikolai Tolstoy published The Minister and the Massacres in 1986, focusing the ultimate burden of blame sharply on Macmillan for the repatriation of anti-communists and old Russian émigrés to Stalin and certain death. Amery stated that the repatriations were "one of the few blots on Harold that I can think of".
[edit] Trivia
- Before Amery married, he had dated novelist Barbara Pym.
- Amery became a close friend of King Zog I of Albania and described him as "the cleverest man I have ever met".
[edit] References
- Monday Club publications list.
- Copping, Robert, The Story of The Monday Club - The First Decade, April 1972 (P/B); and The Monday Club - Crisis and After (Foreword by John Biggs-Davison, M.P.), May 1975, (P/B), pps:12 & 24, published by the Current Affairs Information Service.
- Amery, Julian, M.P., et al, Rhodesia and the Threat to the West Monday Club, London, 1976 (P/B).
- Gash, Norman, with Donald Southgate, David Dilks, and John Ramsden; introduction by Lord Butler, K.G.,P.C., The Conservatives - A History of their Origins to 1965 London, 1977, pps:268-9. ISBN 0-04-942157-3
- Amery, Julian, PC, MP, The Next Four Years, in the Primrose League Gazette, vol.87, no.4, October 1983, London.
- Amery, Julian, MP, The Rt. Hon., Facing up to Soviet Imperialism, in the Monday Club's October 1985 Conservative Party Conference issue of their newspaper, Right Ahead.
- Horne, Alistair, Macmillan, 1894-1956, (volume 1 of the official biography), London, 1988/9, ISBN 0-333-27691-4 , pps: 81, 253, 275, 326, 388, 441.
- Messina, Anthony M, Race and Party Competition in Britain, Oxford, 1989, p.138, ISBN 0-19-827534-X
- Dod's Parliamentary Companion 1991, 172 edition, East Sussex, p.394, ISBN 0-905702-17-4
- Clark, Alan, The Tories - Conservatives and The Nation State, London, 1998, pps: 324-5, ISBN 0-297-81849-X
- Heffer, Simon, Like The Roman - The Life of Enoch Powell, London, 1998, ISBN 0-297-84286-2
- Weale, Adrian, Patriot Traitors - Roger Casement & John Amery, London, 2001, ISBN 0-670-88498-7
- Faber, David, Speaking for England, London, 2005, ISBN 0-7432-5688-3
Parliament of the United Kingdom | ||
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Preceded by: (new constituency) |
Member of Parliament for Preston North 1950–1966 |
Succeeded by: Ronald Atkins |
Preceded by: Sir Luke Teeling |
Member of Parliament for Brighton Pavilion 1969–1992 |
Succeeded by: Sir Derek Spencer |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by: George Reginald Ward |
Secretary of State for Air 1960–1962 |
Succeeded by: Hugh Fraser |
Preceded by: Peter Thorneycroft |
Minister of Aviation 1962–1964 |
Succeeded by: Roy Jenkins |
[edit] External links
- Index entry at JANUS
Categories: 1919 births | 1996 deaths | Members of the United Kingdom Parliament from English constituencies | Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford | Life peers | Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom | Old Etonians | Secretaries of State for Air (UK) | Conservative MPs (UK) | UK MPs 1950-1951 | UK MPs 1951-1955 | UK MPs 1955-1959 | UK MPs 1959-1964 | UK MPs 1964-1966 | UK MPs 1966-1970 | UK MPs 1970-1974 | UK MPs 1974 | UK MPs 1974-1979 | UK MPs 1979-1983 | UK MPs 1983-1987 | UK MPs 1987-1992