Lloyd George ministry
Liberal David Lloyd George formed a coalition government in the United Kingdom in December 1916, and was appointed Prime Minister of the United Kingdom by King George V. It replaced the earlier wartime coalition under H. H. Asquith, which had been held responsible for losses during the Great War.[2] Those Liberals who continued to support Asquith served as the Official Opposition. The government continued in power after the end of the war in 1918, though Lloyd George was increasingly reliant on the Conservatives for support. After several scandals including allegations of the sale of honours, the Conservatives withdrew their support after a meeting at the Carlton Club in 1922, and Bonar Law formed a government.[2]
Lloyd George ministries | |
---|---|
| |
Date formed |
|
Date dissolved |
|
People and organisations | |
Monarch | George V |
Prime Minister | David Lloyd George |
Prime Minister's history | 1916–1922 |
Total no. of members | 269 appointments |
Member parties |
|
Status in legislature | Majority (coalition) |
Opposition party | Independent Liberal Party |
Opposition leaders |
|
History | |
Election | 1918 general election |
Legislature terms | |
Outgoing formation | Carlton Club meeting |
Predecessor | Asquith coalition ministry |
Successor | Law ministry |
Cabinets
editWar Cabinet, December 1916 – January 1919
edit- Lord Curzon of Kedleston – Lord President of the Council and Leader of the House of Lords
- Bonar Law – Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House of Commons
- Arthur Henderson – Minister without Portfolio
- Lord Milner – Minister without Portfolio
Changes
edit- May – August 1917 – In temporary absence of Arthur Henderson, George Barnes, Minister of Pensions acts as a member of the War Cabinet.
- June 1917 – Jan Smuts enters the War Cabinet as a Minister without Portfolio
- July 1917 – Sir Edward Carson enters the War Cabinet as a Minister without Portfolio
- August 1917 – George Barnes succeeds Arthur Henderson (resigned) as Minister without Portfolio and Labour Party member of the War Cabinet.
- January 1918 – Carson resigns and is not replaced
- April 1918 – Austen Chamberlain succeeds Lord Milner as Minister without Portfolio.
- January 1919 – Law becomes Lord Privy Seal, remaining Leader of the House of Commons, and is succeeded as Chancellor of the Exchequer by Chamberlain; both remaining in the War Cabinet. Smuts is succeeded by Sir Eric Geddes as Minister without Portfolio.
Peacetime Cabinet, January 1919 – October 1922
edit- Note: The War Cabinet was formally maintained for much of 1919, but as Lloyd George was out of the country for many months this made little difference; in October 1919 a formal Cabinet was reinstated.
- David Lloyd George – Prime Minister
- Lord Birkenhead – Lord Chancellor
- Lord Curzon of Kedleston – Lord President of the Council and Leader of the House of Lords
- Bonar Law – Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the House of Commons
- Austen Chamberlain – Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Edward Shortt – Secretary of State for the Home Department
- Arthur Balfour – Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
- Lord Milner – Secretary of State for the Colonies
- Winston Churchill – Secretary of State for War and Air
- Edwin Montagu – Secretary of State for India
- Walter Long – First Lord of the Admiralty
- Sir Albert Stanley – President of the Board of Trade
- Robert Munro – Secretary for Scotland
- Ian Macpherson – Chief Secretary for Ireland
- Lord French – Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland
- Christopher Addison – President of the Local Government Board
- Rowland Prothero – President of the Board of Agriculture
- H. A. L. Fisher – President of the Board of Education
- Lord Inverforth – Minister of Munitions
- Sir Robert Horne – Minister of Labour
- George Barnes – Minister without Portfolio
- Sir Eric Geddes – Minister without Portfolio
Changes
edit- May 1919 – Sir Auckland Geddes succeeds Sir Albert Stanley as President of the Board of Trade. Sir Eric Geddes becomes Minister of Transport.
- October 1919 – Lord Curzon of Kedleston succeeds Balfour as Foreign Secretary. Balfour succeeds Curzon as Lord President. The Local Government Board is abolished. Christopher Addison becomes Minister of Health. The Board of Agriculture is abolished. Lord Lee of Fareham becomes Minister of Agriculture. Sir Eric Geddes becomes Minister of Transport.
- January 1920 – George Barnes leaves the cabinet.
- March 1920 – Sir Robert Horne succeeds Sir Auckland Geddes as President of the Board of Trade. Thomas James McNamara succeeds Horne as Minister of Labour.
- April 1920 – Sir Hamar Greenwood succeeds Ian Macpherson as Chief Secretary for Ireland. Sir Laming Worthington-Evans joins the Cabinet as Minister without Portfolio.
- February 1921 – Winston Churchill succeeds Lord Milner as Colonial Secretary. Sir Laming Worthington-Evans succeeds Churchill as War Secretary. Churchill's successor as Air Secretary was not in the Cabinet. Lord Lee of Fareham succeeds Walter Long at the Admiralty. Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen succeeds Lee as Minister of Agriculture.
- March 1921 – Austen Chamberlain succeeds Bonar Law as Lord Privy Seal and Leader of the Commons. Sir Robert Horne succeeds Chamberlain at the Exchequer. Stanley Baldwin succeeds Horne at the Board of Trade.
- April 1921 – Lord French resigns from the cabinet, remaining Lord Lieutenant. Christopher Addison becomes a Minister without Portfolio. Sir Alfred Mond succeeds him as Minister of Health. The Ministry of Munitions is abolished.
- November 1921 – Sir Eric Geddes resigns from the cabinet. His successor as Minister of Transport is not in the Cabinet. The Attorney General, Sir Gordon Hewart, enters the Cabinet.
- March 1922 – Lord Peel succeeds Edwin Montagu as India Secretary.
- April 1922 – The First Commissioner of Works, Lord Crawford, enters the Cabinet.
List of ministers
editMembers of the Cabinet are listed in boldface. Members of the War Cabinet, 6 December 1916 to 31 October 1919, are indicated.
Conservative Liberal Labour |
Office | Name | Date | Party | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury |
David Lloyd George | 6 December 1916 – 19 October 1922 |
Liberal | In the War Cabinet 6 December 1916 – 31 October 1919 | |
Chancellor of the Exchequer | Bonar Law | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Also Leader of the House of Commons; in the War Cabinet since 6 December 1916 | |
Austen Chamberlain | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | Left the War Cabinet 31 October 1919 | ||
Sir Robert Horne | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Financial Secretaries to the Treasury | Sir Hardman Lever | 15 December 1916 – 19 May 1919 |
Liberal | ||
Stanley Baldwin | 18 June 1917 – 1 April 1921 |
Conservative | |||
Hilton Young | 21 April 1921 – 19 October 1922 |
Liberal | |||
Parliamentary Secretaries to the Treasury and Government Chief Whips in the House of Commons |
Lord Edmund Talbot | 14 December 1916 – 1 April 1921 |
Conservative | ||
Neil Primrose | 14 December 1916 – 2 March 1917 |
Liberal | |||
Frederick Guest | 2 March 1917 – 1 April 1921 |
Liberal | |||
Charles McCurdy | 1 April 1921 – 19 October 1922 |
Liberal | |||
Leslie Orme Wilson | 1 April 1921 – 19 October 1922 |
Conservative | |||
Junior Lords of the Treasury | James Hope | 14 December 1916 – 27 January 1919 |
Conservative | ||
John Pratt | 14 December 1916 – 8 August 1919 |
Liberal | |||
Stanley Baldwin | 29 January 1917 – 18 June 1917 |
Conservative | |||
James Parker | 29 January 1917 – 19 October 1922 |
Labour | |||
Josiah Towyn Jones | 29 January 1917 – 4 July 1922 |
Liberal | |||
Robert Sanders | 5 February 1919 – 1 April 1921 |
Liberal | Created a Baronet 28 January 1920 | ||
Sir Godfrey Collins | 8 August 1919 – 10 February 1920 |
Liberal | |||
William Edge | 18 August 1919 – 1 August 1922 |
Liberal | |||
Sir William Sutherland | 15 February 1920 – 7 April 1922 |
Liberal | |||
Sir John Gilmour | 1 April 1921 – 19 October 1922 |
Conservative | |||
Thomas Arthur Lewis | 4 July 1922 – 26 July 1922 |
Liberal | |||
Lord Chancellor | The Lord Finlay | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
The Lord Birkenhead | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | Created Viscount Birkenhead 15 June 1921 | ||
Lord President of the Council | The Earl Curzon of Kedleston | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Also Leader of the House of Lords; in the War Cabinet since 6 December 1916 | |
Arthur Balfour | 23 October 1919 | Conservative | |||
Lord Privy Seal | The Earl of Crawford | 15 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Bonar Law | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | Also Leader of the House of Commons; left the War Cabinet 31 October 1919 | ||
Austen Chamberlain | 23 March 1921 | Conservative | Also Leader of the House of Commons | ||
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs | Arthur Balfour | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
The Earl Curzon of Kedleston | 23 October 1919 | Conservative | Also Leader of the House of Lords; left the War Cabinet 31 October 1919; created Marquess Curzon of Kedleston 28 June 1921 | ||
Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs | Lord Robert Cecil | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Cecil Harmsworth | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | |||
Assistant Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs | The Lord Newton | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Post abolished 10 January 1919 | |
Secretary of State for the Home Department | Sir George Cave | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Created Viscount Cave 14 November 1918 | |
Edward Shortt | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | |||
Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department | William Brace | 10 December 1916 | Labour | ||
Sir Hamar Greenwood | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | |||
John Baird | 29 April 1919 | Conservative | Succeeded as 2nd Baronet 21 June 1920 | ||
First Lord of the Admiralty | Sir Edward Carson | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Sir Eric Geddes | 17 July 1917 | Conservative | |||
Walter Long | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
The Lord Lee of Fareham | 13 February 1921 | Conservative | |||
Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty | Thomas James Macnamara | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Sir James Craig | 2 April 1920 | Conservative | |||
Leo Amery | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Additional Parliamentary Secretary to the Admiralty | The Earl of Lytton | 7 February 1917 | Conservative | Post abolished 27 January 1919 | |
Civil Lord of the Admiralty | E. G. Pretyman | 14 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
The Earl of Lytton | 27 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
The Earl of Onslow | 26 October 1920 | Conservative | |||
Bolton Eyres-Monsell | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Second Civil Lord of the Admiralty | Arthur Pease | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Post abolished 10 January 1919 | |
President of the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries | Rowland Prothero | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Board replaced with Ministry 15 August 1919 | |
Parliamentary Secretaries to the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries | Sir Richard Winfrey | 14 December 1916 – 10 January 1919 |
Liberal | ||
The Duke of Marlborough | 18 February 1917 – 21 March 1918 |
Conservative | |||
The Viscount Goschen | 26 March 1918 – 18 June 1918 |
Conservative | |||
The Lord Clinton | 18 June 1918 – 10 January 1919 |
Conservative | |||
Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | Board replaced with Ministry 15 August 1919 | ||
Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries | The Lord Lee of Fareham | 15 August 1919 | Conservative | ||
Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen | 13 February 1921 | Conservative | |||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries | Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen | 15 August 1919 | Conservative | Also Deputy Minister of Fisheries from 18 November 1919 | |
vacant | 13 February 1921 | ||||
The Earl of Onslow | 5 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
The Earl of Ancaster | 7 April 1921 | Conservative | Also Deputy Minister of Fisheries from 28 October 1921 | ||
President of the Air Board | The Viscount Cowdray | 3 January 1917 | Liberal | Air Board replaced with Air Council 26 November 1917 | |
Parliamentary Secretary to the Air Board | John Baird | 14 December 1916 | Conservative | Air Board replaced with Air Council 26 November 1917 | |
President of the Air Council | The Lord Rothermere | 26 November 1917 | Liberal | ||
The Lord Weir | 26 April 1918 | Liberal | Post abolished 10 January 1919 | ||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Air Council | John Baird | 26 November 1917 | Conservative | Post abolished 10 January 1919 | |
Secretary of State for Air | Winston Churchill | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | ||
Frederick Guest | 1 April 1921 | Liberal | |||
Under-Secretary of State for Air | J. E. B. Seely | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | ||
George Tryon | 22 December 1919 | Conservative | |||
The Marquess of Londonderry | 2 April 1920 | Conservative | |||
The Lord Gorell | 18 July 1921 | Liberal | |||
Minister of Blockade | Lord Robert Cecil | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Sir Laming Worthington-Evans | 18 July 1918 | Conservative | Office abolished 10 July 1919 | ||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Blockade | Frederick Leverton Harris | 22 December 1916 | Conservative | Office abolished 10 January 1919 | |
Secretary of State for the Colonies | Walter Long | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
The Viscount Milner | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
Winston Churchill | 13 February 1921 | Liberal | |||
Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies | Arthur Steel-Maitland | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Created a Baronet 13 July 1917 | |
William Hewins | 26 September 1917 | Conservative | |||
Leo Amery | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
E. F. L. Wood | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
President of the Board of Education | Herbert Fisher | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Education | Herbert Lewis | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | Knighted in 1922 | |
Minister of Food Control | The Lord Devonport | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
The Lord Rhondda | 19 June 1917 | Liberal | Created Viscount Rhondda 19 June 1918 | ||
J. R. Clynes | 9 July 1918 | Labour | |||
George Roberts | 10 January 1919 | Labour | |||
Charles McCurdy | 19 March 1920 | Liberal | Office abolished 31 March 1921 | ||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Food Control | Charles Bathurst | 12 December 1916 | Conservative | Knighted in 1917 | |
J. R. Clynes | 2 July 1917 | Labour | |||
Waldorf Astor | 18 July 1918 | Conservative | |||
Charles McCurdy | 27 January 1919 | Liberal | |||
Sir William Mitchell-Thomson | 19 April 1920 | Conservative | Office abolished 31 March 1921 | ||
President of the Local Government Board | The Lord Rhondda | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
William Fisher | 28 June 1917 | Conservative | |||
Sir Auckland Geddes | 4 November 1918 | Conservative | |||
Christopher Addison | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | Board became Ministry of Health 24 June 1919 | ||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Local Government Board | William Hayes Fisher | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Stephen Walsh | 28 June 1917 | Labour | |||
Waldorf Astor | 27 January 1919 | Conservative | Board became Ministry of Health 24 June 1919 | ||
Minister of Health | Christopher Addison | 24 June 1919 | Liberal | ||
Sir Alfred Mond | 1 April 1921 | Liberal | |||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health | Waldorf Astor | 24 June 1919 | Conservative | Succeeded as 2nd Viscount Astor 18 October 1919 | |
The Earl of Onslow | 7 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Secretary of State for India | Austen Chamberlain | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Edwin Samuel Montagu | 17 July 1917 | Liberal | |||
The Viscount Peel | 19 March 1922 | Conservative | |||
Under-Secretary of State for India | The Lord Islington | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
The Lord Sinha | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | |||
The Earl of Lytton | 22 September 1920 | Conservative | |||
The Earl Winterton | 20 March 1922 | Conservative | |||
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland | The Viscount French of Ypres | 6 May 1918 – 2 May 1921 |
Entered the Cabinet 28 October 1918; left the Cabinet 2 April 1921 | ||
Chief Secretary for Ireland | Henry Duke | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Knighted in 1918 | |
Edward Shortt | 5 May 1918 | Liberal | |||
Ian Macpherson | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | |||
Sir Hamar Greenwood | 2 April 1920 | Liberal | |||
Vice-President of the Department of Agriculture for Ireland | Thomas Wallace Russell | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | Created a Baronet 20 June 1917 | |
Hugh T. Barrie | 15 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
Minister of Labour | John Hodge | 10 December 1916 | Labour | ||
George Roberts | 17 August 1917 | Labour | |||
Sir Robert Horne | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
Thomas James Macnamara | 19 March 1920 | Liberal | |||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Labour | William Bridgeman | 22 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
George James Wardle | 10 January 1919 | Labour | |||
Sir Anderson Montague-Barlow | 2 April 1920 | Conservative | |||
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster | Sir Frederick Cawley | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
The Lord Beaverbrook | 10 February 1918 | Conservative | |||
William Hayes Fisher | 4 November 1918 | Conservative | Created Baron Downham 16 November 1918 | ||
The Earl of Crawford | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
The Viscount Peel | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Sir William Sutherland | 7 April 1922 | Liberal | |||
Minister of Information | The Lord Beaverbrook | 10 February 1918 | Conservative | ||
William Hayes Fisher | 4 November 1918 | Conservative | Created Baron Downham 16 November 1918; office abolished 10 January 1919 | ||
Minister of Munitions | Christopher Addison | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Winston Churchill | 17 July 1917 | Liberal | |||
The Lord Inverforth | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | Office abolished 21 March 1921 | ||
Parliamentary Secretaries to the Ministry of Munitions | Sir Laming Worthington-Evans | 14 December 1916 – 30 January 1918 |
Conservative | ||
F. G. Kellaway | 14 December 1916 – 1 April 1920 |
Liberal | |||
J. E. B. Seely | 10 July 1918 – 10 January 1919 |
Liberal | |||
John Baird | 10 January 1919 – 29 April 1919 |
Liberal | |||
Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Ministry of Munitions | Sir Laming Worthington-Evans | 30 January 1918 – 18 July 1918 |
Conservative | ||
James Hope | 27 January 1919 – 31 March 1921 |
Conservative | |||
Director of National Service | Neville Chamberlain | 15 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Sir Auckland Geddes | 17 August 1917 | Conservative | Post abolished 19 December 1919 | ||
Parliamentary Secretaries to the Ministry of National Service | Stephen Walsh | 17 March 1917 – 28 June 1917 |
Labour | ||
Cecil Beck | 28 June 1917 – 19 December 1919 |
Liberal | |||
The Viscount Peel | 15 April 1918 – 10 January 1919 |
Conservative | |||
Paymaster General | Sir Joseph Compton-Rickett | 15 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Sir Tudor Walters | 26 October 1919 | Liberal | |||
Minister of Pensions | George Nicoll Barnes | 10 December 1916 | Labour | In the War Cabinet 29 May 1917 – 3 August 1917 | |
John Hodge | 17 August 1917 | Labour | |||
Sir Laming Worthington-Evans | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
Ian Macpherson | 2 April 1920 | Liberal | |||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Pensions | Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen | 22 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Sir James Craig | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
George Tryon | 2 April 1920 | Conservative | |||
Postmaster General | Albert Illingworth | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
F. G. Kellaway | 1 April 1921 | Liberal | |||
Assistant Postmaster General | Herbert Pease | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Minister without Portfolio | Arthur Henderson | 10 December 1916 – 12 August 1917 |
Labour | In the War Cabinet 10 December 1916 – 12 August 1917 | |
The Viscount Milner | 10 December 1916 – 18 April 1918 |
Conservative | In the War Cabinet 10 December 1916 – 18 April 1918 | ||
Jan Smuts | 22 June 1917 – 10 January 1919 |
In the War Cabinet 22 June 1917 – 10 January 1919 | |||
Sir Edward Carson | 17 July 1917 – 21 January 1918 |
Conservative | |||
George Nicoll Barnes | 13 August 1917 – 27 January 1920 |
Labour | In the War Cabinet 13 August 1917 – 10 January 1919 | ||
Austen Chamberlain | 18 April 1918 – 10 January 1919 |
Conservative | Entered the War Cabinet 18 April 1918 | ||
Sir Eric Geddes | 10 January 1919 – 19 May 1919 |
Conservative | In the War Cabinet 10 January 1919 – 31 October 1919 | ||
Sir Laming Worthington-Evans | 10 January 1919 – 13 February 1921 |
Conservative | |||
Christopher Addison | 1 April 1921 – 14 July 1921 |
Liberal | |||
Minister of Reconstruction | Christopher Addison | 17 July 1917 | Liberal | ||
Sir Auckland Geddes | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | Office abolished 19 December 1919 | ||
Secretary for Scotland | Robert Munro | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health for Scotland | John Pratt | 8 August 1919 | Liberal | Knighted 1922 | |
Minister of Shipping | Sir Joseph Maclay | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | Office abolished 31 March 1921 | |
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Shipping | Sir Leo Chiozza Money | 22 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Leslie Orme Wilson | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
Minister of Supply | The Lord Inverforth | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | Office abolished 31 March 1921 | |
President of the Board of Trade | Sir Albert Stanley | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Sir Auckland Geddes | 26 May 1919 | Conservative | |||
Sir Robert Horne | 19 March 1920 | Conservative | |||
Stanley Baldwin | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade | George Roberts | 14 December 1916 | Labour | ||
George Wardle | 17 August 1917 | Labour | |||
William Bridgeman | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
Sir Philip Lloyd-Greame | 22 August 1920 | Conservative | |||
Sir William Mitchell-Thomson | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Secretary for Overseas Trade | Sir Arthur Steel-Maitland | 14 September 1917 | Conservative | ||
Sir Hamar Greenwood | 29 April 1919 | Liberal | |||
F. G. Kellaway | 2 April 1920 | Liberal | |||
Sir Philip Lloyd-Greame | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Parliamentary Secretary for Mines | William Bridgeman | 22 August 1920 | Conservative | ||
Minister of Transport | Sir Eric Geddes | 19 May 1919 | Conservative | ||
The Viscount Peel | 7 November 1921 | Conservative | |||
The Earl of Crawford | 12 April 1922 | Conservative | |||
Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Transport | Sir Rhys Williams | 23 September 1919 | Liberal | ||
Arthur Neal | 28 November 1919 | Liberal | |||
Secretary of State for War | The Earl of Derby | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
The Viscount Milner | 18 April 1918 | Conservative | |||
Winston Churchill | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | |||
Sir Laming Worthington-Evans | 13 February 1921 | Conservative | |||
Under-Secretary of State for War | Ian Macpherson | 14 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Viscount Peel | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
Sir Robert Sanders | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Financial Secretary to the War Office | Henry Forster | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | Created Baron Forster 12 December 1919 | |
Sir Archibald Williamson | 18 December 1919 | Liberal | |||
George Frederick Stanley | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Parliamentary Secretary to the War Office | The Earl Stanhope | 14 December 1916 | Conservative | Post abolished 10 January 1919 | |
First Commissioner of Works | Sir Alfred Mond | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
The Earl of Crawford | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | Entered the Cabinet 7 April 1922 | ||
Attorney General | Sir F. E. Smith | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Sir Gordon Hewart | 10 January 1919 | Liberal | Entered the Cabinet 7 November 1921 | ||
Sir Ernest Pollock | 6 March 1922 | Conservative | |||
Solicitor General | Sir Gordon Hewart | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Sir Ernest Pollock | 10 January 1919 | Conservative | |||
Leslie Scott | 6 March 1922 | Conservative | Knighted in 1922 | ||
Lord Advocate | James Clyde | 10 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
Thomas Morison | 25 March 1920 | Liberal | |||
Charles David Murray | 5 March 1922 | Conservative | |||
Solicitor General for Scotland | Thomas Morison | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Charles David Murray | 25 March 1920 | Conservative | |||
Andrew Briggs Constable | 16 March 1922 | Conservative | |||
William Watson | 24 July 1922 | Conservative | |||
Lord Chancellor of Ireland | Sir John O'Brien | 10 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Sir James Campbell | 4 June 1918 | Conservative | |||
Sir John Ross | 27 June 1921 | Conservative | |||
Attorney General for Ireland | James O'Connor | 8 January 1917 | |||
Arthur Samuels | 7 April 1918 | Conservative | |||
Denis Henry | 6 July 1919 | Conservative | |||
Thomas Brown | 5 August 1921 | Conservative | |||
vacant | 16 August 1921 | ||||
Solicitor General for Ireland | James Chambers | 19 March 1917 | Conservative | ||
Arthur Samuels | 12 September 1917 | Conservative | |||
John Powell | 7 April 1918 | Conservative | |||
Denis Henry | 27 November 1918 | Conservative | |||
Daniel Wilson | 6 July 1919 | Conservative | |||
Thomas Brown | 12 June 1921 | Conservative | |||
vacant | 5 August 1921 | ||||
Lord Steward of the Household | The Lord Farquhar | 14 December 1916 | Conservative | Created Viscount Farquhar 21 June 1917 | |
Lord Chamberlain of the Household | The Lord Sandhurst | 14 December 1916 | Liberal | Created Viscount Sandhurst 1 January 1917 | |
The Duke of Atholl | 20 November 1921 | Conservative | |||
Vice-Chamberlain of the Household | Cecil Beck | 14 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
William Dudley Ward | 9 December 1917 | Liberal | |||
Master of the Horse | The Earl of Chesterfield | 14 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
Treasurer of the Household | James Craig | 14 December 1916 | Conservative | Created a Baronet 5 February 1918 | |
vacant | 22 January 1918 | ||||
Robert Sanders | 11 June 1918 | Conservative | |||
Bolton Eyres-Monsell | 5 February 1919 | Conservative | |||
George Gibbs | 1 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Comptroller of the Household | Sir Edwin Cornwall | 14 December 1916 | Liberal | ||
George Frederick Stanley | 28 February 1919 | Conservative | |||
Harry Barnston | 7 April 1921 | Conservative | |||
Captain of the Gentlemen-at-Arms | The Lord Colebrooke | 14 December 1916 | Liberal | Also Joint Government Chief Whip in the House of Lords | |
Captain of the Yeomen of the Guard | The Lord Suffield | 14 December 1916 | Conservative | ||
The Lord Hylton | 21 May 1918 | Conservative | Also Joint Government Chief Whip in the House of Lords | ||
Lords in Waiting | The Lord Herschell | 14 December 1916 – 11 February 1919 |
Liberal | ||
The Lord Stanmore | 14 December 1916 – 19 October 1922 |
Liberal | |||
The Lord Ranksborough | 14 December 1916 – 4 April 1921 |
Liberal | |||
The Viscount Valentia | 14 December 1916 – 19 October 1922 |
Conservative | |||
The Lord Hylton | 14 December 1916 – 18 May 1918 |
Conservative | Also Joint Government Chief Whip in the House of Lords | ||
The Lord Somerleyton | 18 May 1918 – 19 October 1922 |
Conservative | |||
The Earl of Jersey | 11 January 1919 – 17 August 1919 |
Conservative | |||
The Earl of Bradford | 11 February 1919 – 19 October 1922 |
Conservative | |||
The Earl of Onslow | 17 August 1919 – 21 November 1920 |
Conservative | |||
The Earl of Lucan | 12 November 1920 – 19 October 1922 |
Conservative | |||
The Earl of Clarendon | 4 April 1921 – 19 October 1922 |
Conservative |
References
edit- ^ "A Classification of the Members of Parliament Elected in 1918". Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research. 47 (116): 83. November 1974.
- ^ a b Gilbert, Bentley (1992). David Lloyd George: A Political Life: Organizer of Victory, 1912–1916. Ohio State University Press.
Further reading
edit- Burk. K. M. ed. War and the State: The Transformation of British Government 1914–1918 (1982).
- Burk. K. M. Britain, America and the Sinews of War 1914–1918 (1985).
- Butler, David, and G. Butler, Twentieth Century British Political Facts (Macmillan, 2000).
- Cassar, George H. Lloyd George at War, 1916–1918 (2009) full text online at JSTOR; excerpts
- French, David. The Strategy of the Lloyd George Coalition, 1916–1918 (1995)
- Fry, Michael. "Political Change in Britain, August 1914 to December 1916: Lloyd George Replaces Asquith: The Issues Underlying the Drama." Historical Journal 31.03 (1988): 609–627.
- Gardner, Lloyd C. Safe for Democracy: The Anglo-American Response to Revolution, 1913-1923 (1987) diplomatic history
- Grieves, Keith. The politics of manpower, 1914–18 (Manchester UP, 1988).
- Grigg, John. Lloyd George: From Peace to War 1912–1916 (1985)
- Grigg, John. Lloyd George: War Leader 1916–1918 (2002).
- Keohane, Nigel. The party of patriotism: the Conservative Party and the First World War (Routledge, 2016).
- McEwen, John M. "The Struggle for Mastery in Britain: Lloyd George versus Asquith, December 1916." Journal of British Studies 18#1 (1978): 131–156.
- Morgan, Kenneth O. Consensus and disunity: the Lloyd George coalition government, 1918–1922 (1979)
- Morgan, Kenneth O. "Lloyd George's Premiership: A Study in 'Prime Ministerial Government'." Historical Journal 13#1 (1970): 130-57. online.
- Morgan, Kenneth O. "George, David Lloyd, first Earl Lloyd-George of Dwyfor (1863–1945)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2011 accessed 11 Feb 2017 doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34570
- Paxman, Jeremy. Great Britain's Great War (2013), based on TV series.
- Simmonds, Alan G.V. Britain and World War One (Routledge, 2013).
- Somervell, D.C. The Reign of King George V, (1936) pp 161–306. online free
- Taylor, A.J.P. English History: 1914–1945 (1965), pp 66–128
- Wrigley, Chris. Lloyd George and the Challenge of Labour: The Post-War Coalition 1918–1922 (1990).
Primary sources
edit- Lloyd George, David. War Memoirs (6 vols. 1933–36).
- Egerton, George W. "The Lloyd George 'War Memoirs': A Study in the Politics of Memory." Journal of Modern History 60#1 (1988): 55–94. in JSTOR
- Stubbs, John O. "Beaverbrook As Historian: 'Politicians and the War, 1914–1916' Reconsidered." Albion 14#3 (1982): 235–253.