Secretary of State for Education

Secretary of State for Education

Arms of Her Majesty's Government
Department for Education
Incumbent
Michael Gove

since 11 May 2010
Style The Right Honourable
Appointer David Cameron
Inaugural holder William Cowper-Temple
Committee of the Council on Education
John Patten
Secretary of State for Education
Formation 5 February 1857
10 April 1992
Website DfE
United Kingdom

This article is part of the series:
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The Secretary of State for Education (frequently shortened to the Education Secretary) is the chief minister of the Department for Education in the United Kingdom government. The position was re-established on 12 May 2010, held by Michael Gove.

A Committee of the Privy Council was appointed in 1839 to supervise the distribution of certain Government grants in the education field. The members of the Committee were the Lord President of the Council, the Secretaries of State, the First Lord of the Treasury, and the Chancellor of the Exchequer. From 1857 a Vice President was appointed who took responsibility for policy.

In 1899, the Board of Education Act abolished the Committee and instituted a new Board, headed by a President, as of 1 April 1900. The members were initially very similar to the old Committee and the President of the Board was the Lord President of the Council; however, from 1902 this ceased to be the case and the President of the Board was appointed separately (although the Marquess of Londonderry happened to hold both jobs from 1903 to 1905).

The Department of Education and Science was created in 1964 with the merger of the offices of Minister of Education and the Minister of Science. In 1992 the responsibility for science was transferred to Cabinet Office’s Office of Public Service, and the department was renamed Department of Education. In 1995 the department merged with the Department of Employment to become the Department for Education and Employment (DfEE) and in 2001 the employment functions were transferred to a newly created Department for Work and Pensions, with the DfEE becoming the Department for Education and Skills (DfES). In 2007 under Gordon Brown's new premiership, the DfES was split into two new departments; the Department for Children, Schools and Families, and a Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills, under two new Secretaries of State.

The ministerial office of the Secretary of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills was, in late 2009, amalgamated into the new ministerial office of the resurgent politician, Peter Mandelson, ennobled as Lord Mandelson as the newly created Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills - itself an amalgamation of the responsibilities of the Secretaries of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform and Innovation, Universities and Skills - the Secretary of State has remit over Higher Education policy as well as British business and enterprise. As of 12 May 2010, it is headed by Secretary of State Vince Cable.

Contents

List

Vice-President of the Committee of the Council on Education

Name Portrait Took office Left office Political party Prime Minister
William Cowper 5 February 1857 21 February 1858 Whig The Viscount Palmerston
Charles Adderley 12 March 1858 11 June 1859 Conservative The Earl of Derby
Robert Lowe 24 June 1859 26 April 1864
(Resigned)
Liberal The Viscount Palmerston
Henry Bruce 26 April 1864 26 June 1866 Liberal
The Earl Russell
Henry Thomas Lowry-Corry 26 June 1866 19 March 1867 Conservative The Earl of Derby
Lord Robert Montagu 19 March 1867 1 December 1868 Conservative
Benjamin Disraeli
William Edward Forster 9 December 1868 17 February 1874 Liberal William Ewart Gladstone
Viscount Sandon 2 March 1874 4 April 1878 Conservative Benjamin Disraeli
Lord George Hamilton 4 April 1878 21 April 1880 Conservative
A. J. Mundella 3 May 1880 9 June 1885 Liberal William Ewart Gladstone
Edward Stanhope 24 June 1885 17 September 1885 Conservative The Marquess of Salisbury
Sir Henry Holland, Bt 17 September 1885 28 January 1886 Conservative
Sir Lyon Playfair 13 February 1886 20 July 1886 Liberal William Ewart Gladstone
Sir Henry Holland 3 August 1886 25 January 1887 Conservative The Marquess of Salisbury
Sir William Hart Dyke 25 January 1887 11 August 1892 Conservative
Sir Arthur Herbert Dyke Acland 25 August 1892 21 June 1895 Liberal William Ewart Gladstone
The Earl of Rosebery
Sir John Eldon Gorst 4 July 1895 8 August 1902 Conservative The Marquess of Salisbury

President of the Board of Education

Name Portrait Took office Left office Political party Prime Minister
Spencer Cavendish
The Duke of Devonshire
1 April 1900 8 August 1902 Liberal Unionist The Marquess of Salisbury
Charles Vane-Tempest-Stewart
The Marquess of Londonderry
8 August 1902 4 December 1905 Conservative Arthur Balfour
Augustine Birrell 10 December 1905 23 January 1907 Liberal Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
Reginald McKenna 23 January 1907 12 April 1908 Liberal
Walter Runciman 12 April 1908 23 October 1911 Liberal H. H. Asquith
Joseph Albert Pease 23 October 1911 25 May 1915 Liberal
Arthur Henderson 25 May 1915 18 August 1916 Labour
(Coalition)
Robert Crewe-Milnes
The Marquess of Crewe
18 August 1916 10 December 1916 Liberal
(Coalition)
Herbert Albert Laurens Fisher 10 December 1916 19 October 1922 Liberal
(Coalition)
David Lloyd George
E. F. L. Wood 24 October 1922 22 January 1924 Conservative Bonar Law
Stanley Baldwin
Charles Trevelyan 22 January 1924 3 November 1924 Labour Ramsay MacDonald
Lord Eustace Percy 6 November 1924 4 June 1929 Conservative Stanley Baldwin
Sir Charles Trevelyan 7 June 1929 2 March 1931
(Resigned)
Labour Ramsay MacDonald
Hastings Lees-Smith 2 March 1931 24 August 1931 Labour
Sir Donald Maclean 25 August 1931 15 June 1932
(Died in office)
Liberal
(National Govt.)
E. F. L. Wood
Baron Irwin

(Viscount Halifax from 1934)
15 June 1932 7 June 1935 Conservative
(National Govt.)
Oliver Stanley 7 June 1935 28 May 1937 Conservative
(National Govt.)
Stanley Baldwin
James Stanhope
The Earl Stanhope
28 May 1937 27 October 1938 Conservative
(National Govt.)
Neville Chamberlain
Herbrand Sackville
The Earl De La Warr
27 October 1938 3 April 1940 National Labour
(National Govt.;
War Govt.)
Herwald Ramsbotham 3 April 1940 20 July 1941 Conservative
(Coalition)
Winston Churchill
R. A. Butler 20 July 1941 3 August 1944 Conservative
(Coalition)

Minister of Education

Name Took office Left office Political party Prime Minister
R. A. Butler 3 August 1944 25 May 1945 Conservative
(Coalition)
Winston Churchill
Richard Law 25 May 1945 26 July 1945 Conservative
(Caretaker Govt.)
Ellen Wilkinson 3 August 1945 6 February 1947
(Died in office)
Labour Clement Attlee
George Tomlinson 10 February 1947 26 October 1951 Labour
Florence Horsbrugh 2 November 1951 18 October 1954 Conservative Sir Winston Churchill
David Eccles 18 October 1954 13 January 1957 Conservative
Sir Anthony Eden
Quintin Hogg
The Viscount Hailsham
13 January 1957 17 September 1957 Conservative Harold Macmillan
Geoffrey Lloyd 17 September 1957 14 October 1959 Conservative
David Eccles 14 October 1959 13 July 1962 Conservative
Sir Edward Boyle 13 July 1962 1 April 1964 Conservative
Sir Alec Douglas-Home

Secretary of State for Education and Science

Name Took office Left office Political party Prime Minister
Quintin Hogg
(formerly Viscount Hailsham)
1 April 1964 16 October 1964 Conservative Sir Alec Douglas-Home
Michael Stewart 18 October 1964 22 January 1965 Labour Harold Wilson
Anthony Crosland 22 January 1965 29 August 1967 Labour
Patrick Gordon Walker 29 August 1967 6 April 1968 Labour
Edward Short 6 April 1968 19 June 1970 Labour
Margaret Thatcher 20 June 1970 4 March 1974 Conservative Edward Heath
Reginald Prentice 5 March 1974 10 June 1975 Labour Harold Wilson
Fred Mulley 10 June 1975 10 September 1976 Labour
Shirley Williams 10 September 1976 4 May 1979 Labour James Callaghan
Mark Carlisle 5 May 1979 14 September 1981 Conservative Margaret Thatcher
Sir Keith Joseph, Bt. 14 September 1981 21 May 1986 Conservative
Kenneth Baker 21 May 1986 24 July 1989 Conservative
John MacGregor 24 July 1989 2 November 1990 Conservative
Kenneth Clarke 2 November 1990 10 April 1992 Conservative John Major

Secretary of State for Education

Name Took office Left office Party Prime Minister
John Patten 10 April 1992 20 July 1994 Conservative John Major
Gillian Shephard 20 July 1994 5 July 1995 Conservative

Secretary of State for Education and Employment

Name Took office Left office Political party Prime Minister
Gillian Shephard 5 July 1995 2 May 1997 Conservative John Major
David Blunkett 2 May 1997 8 June 2001 Labour Tony Blair

Secretary of State for Education and Skills

Name Portrait Took office Left office Political party Prime Minister
Estelle Morris 8 June 2001 24 October 2002
(Resigned)
Labour Tony Blair
Charles Clarke 24 October 2002 15 December 2004 Labour
Ruth Kelly 15 December 2004 5 May 2006 Labour
Alan Johnson 5 May 2006 27 June 2007 Labour

Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families

In 2007, the education portfolio was divided between the Department for Children, Schools and Families (responsible for infant, primary and secondary education), and the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (responsible for further, higher and adult education). In 2009, the latter department was merged into the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.

Secretary of State for
Children, Schools and Families

Secretary of State for
Innovation, Universities and Skills

Political party Prime Minister
Name Portrait Took office Left office Name Portrait Took office Left office
Ed Balls 28 June 2007 11 May 2010 John Denham 28 June 2007 5 June 2009 Labour Gordon Brown
DIUS merged with the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform to create a new department headed by the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills.

Secretary of State for Education

The Department for Education and the post of Secretary of State for Education were recreated in 2010. Responsibility for higher and adult education remains with the Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, currently Vince Cable.

Name Portrait Took office Left office Political party Prime Minister
Michael Gove 11 May 2010 Incumbent Conservative David Cameron

External links