Peter Thorneycroft Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Lord Thorneycroft
Office:Chancellor of the Exchequer
Primeminister:Harold Macmillan
Term Start:13 January 1957
Term End:6 January 1958
Predecessor:Harold Macmillan
Successor:Derick Heathcoat-Amory
Office1:Chairman of the Conservative Party
Leader1:Margaret Thatcher
Term Start1:11 February 1975
Term End1:14 September 1981
Predecessor1:William Whitelaw
Successor1:Cecil Parkinson
Office2:Secretary of State for Defence
Primeminister2:Harold Macmillan
Alec Douglas-Home
Term Start2:13 July 1962
Term End2:16 October 1964
Predecessor2:Harold Watkinson
Successor2:Denis Healey
Office3:Minister of Aviation
Primeminister3:Harold Macmillan
Term Start3:27 July 1960
Term End3:13 July 1962
Predecessor3:Duncan Sandys
Successor3:Julian Amery
Office4:President of the Board of Trade
Primeminister4:Winston Churchill
Anthony Eden
Term Start4:30 October 1951
Term End4:13 January 1957
Predecessor4:Hartley Shawcross
Successor4:David Eccles
Office5:Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Term Start5:4 December 1967
Term End5:4 June 1994
Life Peerage
Embed:yes
Office6:Member of Parliament
for Monmouth
Term Start6:31 October 1945
Term End6:10 March 1966
Predecessor6:Leslie Pym
Successor6:Donald Anderson
Office7:Member of Parliament
for Stafford
Term Start7:9 June 1938
Term End7:15 June 1945
Predecessor7:William Ormsby-Gore
Successor7:Stephen Swingler
Office8:Shadow Home Secretary
Leader8:Edward Heath
1Blankname8:Shadowing
1Namedata8:Frank Soskice
Roy Jenkins
Term Start8:4 August 1965
Term End8:13 April 1966
Predecessor8:Edward Boyle
Successor8:Quintin Hogg
Office9:Shadow Secretary of State for Defence
Leader9:Alec Douglas-Home
1Blankname9:Shadowing
1Namedata9:Denis Healey
Term Start9:16 October 1964
Term End9:4 August 1965
Predecessor9:Denis Healey
Successor9:Enoch Powell
Birth Date:1909 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Dunston, United Kingdom
Death Place:London, United Kingdom
Party:Conservative
Alma Mater:Royal Military Academy, Woolwich
City Law School

George Edward Peter Thorneycroft, Baron Thorneycroft, (26 July 1909 – 4 June 1994) was a British Conservative Party politician. He served as Chancellor of the Exchequer between 1957 and 1958.

Early life

Born in Dunston, Staffordshire, Thorneycroft was the son of Major George Edward Mervyn Thorneycroft and Dorothy Hope Franklyn. He was the grandson of Sir William Franklyn and nephew of Sir Harold Franklyn.[1] He was educated at Eton and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. He was commissioned into the Royal Artillery as a second lieutenant on 29 August 1929 but resigned his commission on 1 July 1931. In 1933, he was called to the bar for the Inner Temple.

Political career

He entered Parliament in the 1938 Stafford by-election, for the borough of Stafford. He was re-commissioned into the Royal Artillery in his previous rank on 30 August 1939. During the Second World War, he served with the Royal Artillery and the general staff. Along with other members of the Tory Reform Committee, Thorneycroft pressed his party to support the Beveridge Report.

He served in the Conservative caretaker Government 1945 as Parliamentary Secretary at the Ministry of War Transport. In the 1945 general election, he lost his seat to his Labour opponent, Stephen Swingler, but he returned in the 1945 Monmouth by-election for Monmouth a few months later.[2]

Throughout the late 1940s Thorneycroft worked assiduously to refurbish the Conservative Party after its disastrous defeat in the 1945 general election. His opposition to the Anglo-American loan in the Commons earned him a reputation as a parliamentary debater, and when the Conservatives returned to power after the general election of 1951, he was appointed President of the Board of Trade. He was instrumental in persuading the government in 1954 to abandon the party's support for protectionism and accept the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.[3]

Chancellorship and resignation

Thorneycroft's support for Harold Macmillan in Macmillan's successful 1957 leadership contest for the premiership led to his appointment as Chancellor of the Exchequer, one of the most senior positions in the government. He resigned in 1958, along with two junior Treasury Ministers, Enoch Powell and Nigel Birch, because of increased government expenditure. Macmillan, himself a former chancellor, made a famous and much-quoted remark that the resignations were merely "little local difficulties". (In reality, Macmillan was deeply concerned about the possible effects of Thorneycroft's resignation.)

In retrospect, Thorneycroft questioned the wisdom of his resignation, saying that "we probably made our stand too early."

Later political career

Thorneycroft returned to the Cabinet in 1960, when he was appointed Minister of Aviation by Macmillan. In 1962, he was promoted to be Minister of Defence. He retained the post upon Macmillan's replacement by Sir Alec Douglas-Home; then in April 1964 the post was combined with the First Lord of the Admiralty, Secretary of State for War and Secretary of State for Air as the Secretary of State for Defence. At Defence, Thorneycroft played a pivotal role in the Sunda Straits Crisis, first supporting and then opposing the passage of the aircraft carrier HMS Victorious through the Indonesian-claimed Sunda Strait during the height of the Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation in August and September 1964.[4]

After the Government was defeated in 1964, Thorneycroft first served as Shadow Secretary of State for Defence under Alec Douglas-Home, before being made Shadow Home Secretary by Edward Heath the next year. Thorneycroft lost his seat at the 1966 general election, and was raised to the peerage as a life peer as Baron Thorneycroft, of Dunston in the County of Stafford on 4 December 1967.

Later life

Thorneycroft was a strong supporter of Margaret Thatcher's monetarist policies, and she made him Chairman of the Conservative Party in 1975. He held the position until 1981.

He was notable as an amateur watercolourist and held exhibitions. Winston Churchill, when told of Thorneycroft's interest, had said, "Every minister must have his vice. Painting shall be yours".[2]

He was appointed to the Order of the Companions of Honour as a Member (CH) in the 1980 New Year Honours. During his time as M.P. for Monmouth, Thorneycroft lived at Machen House, in the hamlet of Lower Machen, to the west of the City of Newport.[5]

Family

His grandfather was the Victorian Colonel Thomas Thorneycroft, a Wolverhampton industrialist, eccentric, landowner and well-known Conservative; he was asked to stand for election by Benjamin Disraeli. Colonel Thorneycroft owned or leased various houses in Staffordshire and Shropshire including Tettenhall Towers and Tong Castle.

His great-grandfather was George Benjamin Thorneycroft, an ironfounder, JP, Deputy Lord Lieutenant of Staffordshire and first Mayor of Wolverhampton. His grandfather's cousin was John Isaac Thorneycroft who founded Vosper Thorneycroft. A second cousin was Siegfried Sassoon. A third cousin was William Whitelaw. Another second cousin was the novelist Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler. His great uncle was Lord Wolverhampton.

After his first marriage, to Sheila Wells Page, and divorce, he married Carla, Contessa Roberti (later known as Lady Thorneycroft, DBE) in 1949. He had a son by his first wife and a daughter by his second wife.

Further reading

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Block . Maxine . Rothe . Anna Herthe . Candee . Marjorie Dent . Current Biography Yearbook . 1953 . H. W. Wilson Co. . 592 . 9780824201180 . 12 May 2019 . en.
  2. News: Obituary: Lord Thorneycroft . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220526/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/obituary-lord-thorneycroft-1420748.html . 26 May 2022 . subscription . live . The Independent . London . Alan . Howarth . 6 June 1994 . 22 May 2010.
  3. Robert Shepard, "Theorneycroft, (George Edward) Peter", in The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century British Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), p. 642
  4. Easter, David (2012). Britain and the Confrontation with Indonesia, 1960–66. I.B.Tauris, p. 100.
  5. Web site: Country estate in need of modernisation. Joanne. Ridout. Wales Online. 22 July 2022. 25 July 2022.