Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Lord Passfield | |
Honorific-Suffix: | OM PC |
Order1: | President of the Board of Trade |
Term Start1: | 22 January 1924 |
Term End1: | 3 November 1924 |
Monarch1: | George V |
Primeminister1: | Ramsay MacDonald |
Predecessor1: | Sir Philip Lloyd-Graeme |
Successor1: | Sir Philip Lloyd-Graeme |
Order2: | Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs |
Term Start2: | 7 June 1929 |
Term End2: | 5 June 1930 |
Monarch2: | George V |
Primeminister2: | Ramsay MacDonald |
Predecessor2: | Leo Amery |
Successor2: | James Henry Thomas |
Order3: | Secretary of State for the Colonies |
Term Start3: | 7 June 1929 |
Term End3: | 24 August 1931 |
Monarch3: | George V |
Primeminister3: | Ramsay MacDonald |
Predecessor3: | Leo Amery |
Successor3: | James Henry Thomas |
Birth Date: | 1859 7, df=yes |
Birth Place: | London, England |
Death Place: | Liphook, Hampshire, England |
Party: | Labour |
Alma Mater: | Birkbeck, University of London King's College London |
Birth Name: | Sidney James Webb |
Sidney James Webb, 1st Baron Passfield, (13 July 1859 – 13 October 1947) was a British socialist, economist and reformer, who co-founded the London School of Economics.[1] He was an early member of the Fabian Society in 1884, joining, like George Bernard Shaw, three months after its inception. Along with his wife Beatrice Webb and with Annie Besant, Graham Wallas, Edward R. Pease, Hubert Bland and Sydney Olivier, Shaw and Webb turned the Fabian Society into the pre-eminent politico-intellectual society in Edwardian England. He wrote the original, pro-nationalisation Clause IV for the British Labour Party.
Webb was born at 45, Cranbourn Street, near Leicester Square, London, the second of three children of Charles Webb (1828/9-1891) and Elizabeth Mary (1820/21-1895), née Stacey. His father was "variously described as an accountant, a perfumer, and a hairdresser"; his mother was a "hairdresser and dealer in toiletries". Webb's upbringing was "comfortable", the family employing a live-in servant; his father was "a man of local substance" as a rate collector, guardian, and sergeant in a volunteer regiment. Having attended a "first-class middle class day school" at St Martin's Lane, and his parents having sent him abroad to Switzerland and Germany to extend his education, [2] Webb later studied law at the Birkbeck Literary and Scientific Institution for a degree of the University of London in his spare time, while holding an office job. He also studied at King's College London, before being called to the Bar at Gray's Inn in 1885.
In 1895, Webb helped to found the London School of Economics with a bequest left to the Fabian Society. He was appointed its Professor of Public Administration in 1912 and held the post for 15 years. In 1892, he married Beatrice Potter, who shared his interests and beliefs.[3] The money she contributed to the marriage enabled him to give up his clerical job and concentrate on his other activities. Sidney and Beatrice Webb founded the New Statesman magazine in 1913.[4]
Webb and Potter were members of the Labour Party and took an active role in politics. Sidney became Member of Parliament for Seaham at the 1922 general election.[5] The couple's influence can be seen in their hosting of the Coefficients, a dining club that drew in some leading statesmen and thinkers of the day. In 1929, he was created Baron Passfield of Passfield Corner in the County of Southampton. He served as Secretary of State for the Colonies and as Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs in Ramsay MacDonald's second Labour Government in 1929.
As Colonial Secretary he issued the Passfield White Paper that revised the government policy on Palestine, previously set by the Churchill White Paper of 1922. In 1930, failing health caused him to step down as Dominions Secretary, but he stayed on as Colonial Secretary until the fall of the Labour government in August 1931.
The Webbs ignored mounting evidence of atrocities being committed by Joseph Stalin and remained supporters of the Soviet Union until their deaths. Having reached their seventies and early eighties, their books, Soviet Communism: A New Civilisation? (1935) and The Truth About Soviet Russia (1942), still gave a positive assessment of Stalin's regime. The Trotskyist historian Al Richardson later dubbed Soviet Communism: A New Civilization? "pure Soviet propaganda at its most mendacious".[6]
Webb co-authored with his wife The History of Trade Unionism (1894). For the Fabian Society he wrote on poverty in London, the eight-hour day, land nationalisation, the nature of socialism, education, eugenics,[7] and reform of the House of Lords. He also drafted Clause IV, which committed the Labour Party to public ownership of industry.
In H. G. Wells' The New Machiavelli (1911), the Webbs, as "the Baileys", are mercilessly lampooned as short-sighted, bourgeois manipulators. The Fabian Society, of which Wells was briefly a member (1903–1908), fares no better in his estimation.
Beatrice Webb in her diary records that they "read the caricatures of ourselves... with much interest and amusement. The portraits are very clever in a malicious way."[8] [9] She reviews the book and Wells's character, summarising: "As an attempt at representing a political philosophy the book utterly fails..."[10]
When his wife, Beatrice, died in 1943, the casket of her ashes was buried in the garden of their house in Passfield Corner, as were those of Lord Passfield in 1947.
Shortly afterwards, George Bernard Shaw launched a petition to have both reburied in Westminster Abbey, which was eventually granted – the Webbs' ashes are interred in the nave, close to those of Clement Attlee and Ernest Bevin.
The Webbs were also friends of philosopher Bertrand Russell.[11]
In 2006, the London School of Economics, alongside the Housing Association, renamed its Great Dover Street student residence Sidney Webb House in his honour.
Sidney Webb's papers form part of the Passfield archive at the London School of Economics.[12] Posts about Sidney Webb regularly appear in the LSE Archives blog.[13]