| Chamberlain, Sir Austen (1863-1937) |
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Chamberlain made
his mark quickly. His maiden speech in 1893 was praised by William Gladstone;
from 1895 to 1900 he was civil lord of the Admiralty; from 1900 to 1902,
financial secretary to the Treasury; for one year, 1902-1903, the postmaster
general; from 1903 to 1906, he was chancellor of the Exchequer. Upon Bonar Law's retirement from the leadership of the Conservative Party in 1921, Chamberlain succeeded him for eighteen months. By this time Lloyd George's coalition was tottering and the rank and file of the Conservative Party wanted to break away from it. When Chamberlain stood by the prime minister, the party, withdrawing from the coalition, first placed Bonar Law in the prime ministry and then Stanley Baldwin. In the Baldwin government
of 1924 to 1929, Chamberlain was secretary of state for foreign affairs.
His brilliant tenure in office reflected the brilliant qualities he brought
to it. In establishing policy, he was philosophically realistic and morally
fearless; in pursuing a course of action he was patient, determined, resourceful;
in personal negotiation he was linguistically fluent, faultlessly polite,
charming in manner and elegant in appearance. The road to Locarno
now lay open. Gustav Stresemann, the German foreign minister, and Aristide
Briand, the French foreign minister, were willing to travel the road with
him. After meticulous preparation during the summer of 1925, representatives
of seven powers - Great Britain, Germany, France, Belgium, Italy, Poland,
and Czechoslovakia - met at Locarno in southern Switzerland on October
5, 1925. On Chamberlain's birthday, October 16, the foreign ministers
initialed the documents known as the Locarno Agreements. Eight treaties
or agreements in all, they included the Rhine Guarantee Pact (or «Locarno
Pact») with Germany, Belgium, France, Great Britain, and Italy as signatories;
individual treaties of arbitration between Germany and former enemy nations;
guarantee treaties involving France, Poland, and Czechoslovakia; and a
collective note on the entry of Germany into the League of Nations. In his later years in the foreign office Chamberlain dealt with vexing questions in China and Egypt. He displayed what firmness he could in defending British interests against encroachments of the Chinese Nationalists, but, lacking full cooperation from the United States and Japan, could forge no long-range solutions. To provide some permanent pattern for Anglo-Egyptian relations, Chamberlain drew up a draft of a treaty in 1927 which anticipated the treaty signed in the mid-thirties. Out of office in
his last years, partly because he chose to provide opportunity for the
young men in Parliament, Chamberlain still spoke with a commanding voice
in the Commons. He was among the first to see potential danger in Hitler;
he favored both the imposition of sanctions against Italy during the Abyssinian
crisis and their removal when they failed to prevent an Italian victory. During these years he was also writing with a graceful pen. His Down the Years is part reminiscence, part character studies of great men he had known, part familiar essays. His Politics from Inside consists chiefly of letters he wrote to his stepmother from 1906 to 1914 to keep his ailing father informed of governmental and diplomatic events. On March 17, 1937, Austen Chamberlain died of apoplexy, the same affliction that had killed his father a month before World War I began. |