1937 Imperial Conference Explained

Summit Name:1937 Imperial Conference
Country: United Kingdom
Date:
Cities:London
Heads Of State Label: or Government
Heads Of State:8
Chairperson:Stanley Baldwin
(to 28 May),
Neville Chamberlain
(from 28 May)
(Prime Minister of the United Kingdom)
Precedes:1944 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference
Keypoints:Foreign affairs, defence, trade, Imperial Federation

The 1937 Imperial Conference was held in London from 14 May to 24 June 1937, following the coronation of George VI and Elizabeth on 12 May.[1] It was the eighth and final Imperial Conference and the last meeting of British and dominion prime ministers held until World War II.

Topics included the foreign affairs and defence - in particular whether or not the foreign policies of the dominions should follow that of the British government, trade policy and constitutional arrangements. On the last question, the proposal for an Imperial Federation was discussed and dismissed.

The conference was attended by representatives of the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India, Southern Rhodesia and Burma. Newfoundland was represented by the UK Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs and the colonial empire by the UK Secretary of State for the Colonies. It was the first Imperial Conference in which the Irish Free State chose not to participate.[2] Nonetheless, the Irish Free State was still regarded as a Commonwealth member.

Delegates attended plenary meetings for the opening and closing sessions of the Conference, on 14 May and 15 June respectively, and during the intervening month there were twenty meetings of principal delegates. Sub-committees gave specialised attention to a number of topics, including imperial shipping, economic questions, constitutional questions, civil air communications, Antarctica and the New Hebrides. During the conference, on 28 May, there was a changeover in the office of Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from Stanley Baldwin to Neville Chamberlain.

New Zealand Prime Minister Michael Joseph Savage attended, with High Commissioner Bill Jordan and civil servant Carl Berendsen (who recalled that neither Ireland or South Africa were represented). The New Zealand government was opposed to appeasement and Italy's invasion of Abyssinia (Ethiopia). Savage criticised appeasement at the conference, saying "Is your policy peace at any price; if it is so I cannot accept it". Anthony Eden replied "No, not at any price, but peace at almost any price", to which Savage replied: "You can pay too high a price even for peace".[3]

The Conference

The conference was hosted by King-Emperor George VI, with his Prime Ministers and members of their respective cabinets:

NationNamePortfolio
Stanley Baldwin
(until 28 May)
Neville Chamberlain
(from 28 May)
Prime Minister (Chairman)
Joseph LyonsPrime Minister
BurmaBa MawChief Minister
William Lyon Mackenzie KingPrime Minister
IndiaThe Marquis of ZetlandSecretary of State
Michael Joseph SavagePrime Minister
Godfrey HugginsPrime Minister
South AfricaJ. B. M. HertzogPrime Minister

References

Sources

Citations

Notes and References

  1. Wilson . Robert R. . 1938 . The Imperial Conference of 1937 . American Journal of International Law . en . 32 . 2 . 335–339 . 10.2307/2190981 . 2190981 . 0002-9300.
  2. Dáil Éireann 27/Apr/1937 wherein President de Valera said "the circumstances were such that the interests of the State would [not] be served by going [to the Conference]"
  3. Book: Berendsen, Carl . Mr Ambassador: Memoirs of Sir Carl Berendsen . 2009 . Victoria University Press . Wellington . 9780864735843 . 128–9 .