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'Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman'
GCB (
7 September 1836 –
22 April 1908) was a
British Liberal statesman who served as
Prime Minister from
December 5 1905 until resigning due to ill health on
April 3 1908. No previous
First Lord of the Treasury had been officially called "Prime Minister"; this term only came into official usage after he took office.
Campbell-Bannerman was born at
Kelvinside House in
Glasgow,
Scotland, in 1836 as 'Henry Campbell'. The surname ''Bannerman'' was added to his surname in 1871 as required by his maternal uncle's
will. It was a condition of his
inheritance of his uncle's
Kent estate, Hunton Court.
He was the second son and youngest of six children born to Sir
James Campbell (1790-1876), who was
Lord Provost of Glasgow 1840-1843, and his wife Janet Bannerman (d. 1873). Campbell-Bannerman was educated at
Glasgow High School (1845-1847), the
University of Glasgow (1851), and
Trinity College, Cambridge (1854-1858), where he achieved a
Third-Class Degree in
Classical Tripos. After graduating, he joined ''J.& W. Campbell & Co.'', his family's firm, who were warehousemen and
drapers in Glasgow.
In
1868, he was elected to the
House of Commons as Liberal
Member of Parliament for
Stirling Burghs — a constituency he was to represent for forty years.
He was appointed as
Financial Secretary to the War Office in November 1871, serving in this position until 1874, and again from 1880 to 1882. After serving as
Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty from 1882 to 1884, he entered
Gladstone's second cabinet as
Chief Secretary for Ireland in
1884.
In Gladstone's Third (
1886) and Fourth (
1892-
1894) Cabinets and Rosebery's Government (
1894-
1895) he served as
Secretary of State for War, where he persuaded the
Duke of Cambridge, the
Queen's cousin, to resign as Commander-in-Chief. This earned Campbell-Bannerman a knighthood. In
1898 Sir Henry succeeded
Sir William Vernon Harcourt as leader of the Liberals in the House of Commons. Campbell-Bannerman had a difficult time in holding together the strongly divided party (which was defeated in the "Khaki Election" of
1900), but when the Liberals returned to power in
1905, he became
Prime Minister.
Campbell-Bannerman's premiership saw the introduction of the so-called
Liberal reforms, which included the introduction of sick pay and old age pensions, as well as the achievement of an
Entente with Russia in
1907, brought about principally by the Foreign Secretary,
Sir Edward Grey. In that same year, Campbell-Bannerman achieved the honour of becoming the
Father of the House, the only serving British Prime Minister to do so to date. Nevertheless his health soon took a turn for the worse, and he resigned as Prime Minister on
3 April 1908, to be succeeded by the
Chancellor of the Exchequer,
Herbert Henry Asquith. Campbell-Bannerman remained in residence at
10 Downing Street in the immediate aftermath of his resignation, and became the only (former) Prime Minister to die there, on
22 April 1908.
His last words were "This is not the end of me."
[1] Campbell-Bannerman was buried in the churchyard of
Meigle Parish Church,
Perthshire, near his home,
Belmont Castle.
In an uncharacteristically emotional speech on the day of Campbell-Bannerman's funeral, his successor
H. H. Asquith told the House of Commons: "He was not ashamed, even on the verge of old age, to see visions and to dream dreams... He met both good and evil fortune with the same unclouded brow, the same unruffled temper, the same unshakeable confidence in the justice and righteousness of his cause."
Another of Campbell-Bannerman's cabinet Ministers — who was also later to serve as Prime Minister —
David Lloyd George, said of his passing, "I have never met a great public figure who so completely won the attachment and affection of the men who came into contact with him. He was not merely admired and respected; he was absolutely loved by us all. The masses of the people of the country, especially the more unfortunate of them, have lost the best friend they have ever had in the high place of the land. ... He was a truly great man. A great head and a great heart. He was absolutely the bravest man I ever met in politics."
There is a
blue plaque outside Campbell-Bannerman's house at 6 Grosvenor Place, London SW1. His bronze bust, sculpted by
Paul Raphael Montford is in
Westminster Abbey (1908)
[2].
Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman's Government, December 1905 - April 1908

Blue plaque at 6 Grosvenor Place, London
★ Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman -
Prime Minister,
First Lord of the Treasury and
Leader of the House of Commons
★
Lord Loreburn -
Lord Chancellor
★
Lord Crewe -
Lord President of the Council
★
Lord Ripon -
Lord Privy Seal and
Leader of the House of Lords
★
H. H. Asquith -
Chancellor of the Exchequer
★
Herbert Gladstone -
Secretary of State for the Home Department
★
Sir Edward Grey -
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
★
Lord Elgin -
Secretary of State for the Colonies
★
Richard Haldane -
Secretary of State for War
★
John Morley -
Secretary of State for India
★
Lord Tweedmouth -
First Lord of the Admiralty
★
David Lloyd George -
President of the Board of Trade
★
Sir Henry Fowler -
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
★
Sir John Sinclair -
Secretary for Scotland
★
James Bryce -
Chief Secretary for Ireland
★
John Burns -
President of the Local Government Board
★
Lord Carrington -
President of the Board of Agriculture
★
Augustine Birrell -
President of the Board of Education
★
Sydney Buxton -
Postmaster-General
Changes
★ January
1907 - Augustine Birrell succeeds Bryce as Irish Secretary.
Reginald McKenna succeeds Birrell at the Board of Education.
★ March
1907 -
Lewis Harcourt, the
First Commissioner of Public Works, enters the Cabinet.
Political offices
|-
External links
★
Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman biography from the Liberal Democrat History Group
★
More about Henry Campbell-Bannerman on the Downing Street website.
References
1. Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman at 10 Downing Street
2. british war memorials · paul montford