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CHARLES FREDERICK GURNEY MASTERMAN

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'Charles Frederick Gurney Masterman' PC (25 October 187417 November 1927) was a British Liberal Party politician and journalist. He was related to many influential Victorian religious and social reformers such as Elizabeth Fry (his great aunt) through his mother's Quaker family, the Gurneys. He graduated from Christ's College, Cambridge University (where he was President of the Union) with two primary interests: social reform (influenced by Christian Socialism) and literature. His first published work was "From The Abyss", a collection of articles he had written anonymously whilst living in the slums of south east London. These were highly impressionistic pieces, and reflected his literary leanings. Following this he became involved journalism and co edited the English Review with Ford Madox Ford. In this period of his life he established many of the literary frienships that would be important in his later role of head of British propaganda in World War One.
He was an unsuccessful candidate at the Dulwich by-election, 1903, but in the Liberal Party landslide victory at the 1906, he was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for West Ham North. In 1909 he published his best known book ''The Condition of England'', in a survey of contemporary society with particular focus on the state of the working class. He married Lucy Blanche Lyttelton (1884 - 1977), a poet and writer, in 1908. Her biography of him was published in 1939. He worked closely with Winston Churchill and Lloyd George on the People's Budget of 1909. Beatrice Webb was to note her in her diaries of his "almost unnaturally close friendship" with Churchill.
Masterman was re-elected in January 1910 and in December 1910, but the December election was later declared void.[1] He was returned to Parliament at a by-election in July 1911 for the Bethnal Green South West constituency.[2][3]
He was sworn as a Privy Councillor in 1912[4], and in 1914 he was appointed to the Cabinet as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. However under the law at the time, any MP accepting an "office of profit under the Crown" was legally required to recontest their seat in a by-election. Masterman lost his own seat, though this was not uncommon, and stood in two further seats, losing each time. He resigned from the Government as a result. Many believed that a promising political career had been destroyed by the legal requirement, a hangover from the era when Parliament had sought to curb the influence of the Crown on MPs, which would be amended and finally repealed altogether in the next twelve years.
When the first world war began, he served as head of the British War Propaganda Bureau (WPB), set up at Wellington House, London, which sole aim was to provide support for Britain, through the manipulation of information about the Central Powers. In this role, he recruited writers (such as John Buchan, H. G. Wells and Arthur Conan Doyle) and painters (eg: Francis Dodd, Paul Nash) to support the war effort. The main objective of this department was to encourage the United States to enter the war on the British & French side. Lecture tours and exhibitions of paintings were organised in the U.S. Masterman played a crucial role in publicising reports of the Armenian Genocide, in part to strengthen the moral case against the Ottoman Empire. For his role in this, Masterman has been the target of repeated Turkish allegations that he fabricated, or at least embellished, the events for propaganda purposes.
Masterman eventually returned to the House of Commons in the 1923 general election, as MP for Manchester Rusholme, but by this point the Liberal Party was in decline and, like most other Liberals, he lost his seat in the 1924 general election. His health declined rapidly, hastened by drug and alcohol abuse. He died in 1927 whilst in the clinic, some arguing that he committed suicide.

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Full text of 'The Condition of England'

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