John Grenville

John Ashley Soames Grenville

Born January 11, 1928(1928-01-11)
Berlin, Germany
Died March 7, 2011(2011-03-07) (aged 83)
London
Residence UK
Citizenship UK
Nationality British
Fields History
Alma mater London School of Economics

John Ashley Soames Grenville (11 January 1928 – 7 March 2011) was a historian of the modern world.[1]

Contents

Biography

Grenville was born Hans Guhrauer in Berlin, Germany on 11 January 1928. In 1939, escaped the Holocaust via Kindertransport with his brothers Julian and Walter. He officially changed his name in 1949 to John Ashley Soames Grenville upon receiving British citizenship. His Mother died in a concentration camp, and his father had limited means to support the family. He attended preparatory school in Essex. He attended Cambridge Technical School,and than took a gardening job in Peterhouse, Cambridge. he given access to the Library at the college, but only if he promised not to apply to the college. Thus, he began to study on his own during the day and take classes at Birkbeck College in the evening. Grenville was given the London County Council Grant, so he was then able to attend University of London. He then attended Birkbeck College, University of London and the London School of Economics, where he was awarded a First Class Honors Degree in History and later a PhD. He studied under Sir Chalres Webster and received his Honors Degree in 1951. He was awarded the Hutchinson Medal for his PhD in 1953. His PhD was later entitled Lord Salisbury and Foreign Policy: The Close of the 19th Century in 1964, and he was recognized as a true historian. [2] He was later a Commonwealth Fund Fellow at Yale University.

Grenville was a professor and head of the Department of Modern History at Birmingham University from 1969 to 1994. He later worked at Hamburg University and London's Leo Baeck Institute.

Grenville focused on portraying himself as an Englishman with German roots; thus, most of his studies revolved around this. He developed the international studies degree at in Leeds, which focused on the use of film as a tool for understanding history.

Grenville married twice. He met Betty Anne Rosenberg through a Harkness Fellowship at Yale; they had three sons together. However, she soon died, and left Grenville with three sons to raise on his own. Patricia Carnie comforted him throughout the loss, and they married in 1975 and continued to have children.

Grenville died on the 7 March 2011;Patricia, his sons, Murray, Edward and George, his daughters, Claire and Annabel, and Walter all survive him.

Memorial

John A. S. Grenville PhD Studentship in Modern Jewish History and Culture awarded by the Leo Baeck Institute.[3]

Publications

References

  1. ^ John Grenville obituary | Books | The Guardian
  2. ^ http://archives.lse.ac.uk/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&id=IMAGELIBRARY%2F1340
  3. ^ John A. S. Grenville PhD Studentship in Modern Jewish History and Culture