Richard Haldane, 1st Viscount Haldane

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The Right Honourable
The Viscount Haldane
KT OM PC KC FRS FSA FBA
250px
Lord Haldane
Secretary of State for War
In office
10 December 1905 – 12 June 1912
Prime Minister Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman
H. H. Asquith
Preceded by H. O. Arnold-Forster
Succeeded by Colonel J.E.B. Seely
Lord Chancellor
In office
10 June 1912 – 25 May 1915
Prime Minister H. H. Asquith
Preceded by The Earl Loreburn
Succeeded by The Lord Buckmaster
In office
22 January 1924 – 6 November 1924
Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald
Preceded by The Viscount Cave
Succeeded by The Viscount Cave
Leader of the House of Lords
In office
22 January 1924 – 3 November 1924
Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald
Preceded by The Marquess Curzon of Kedleston
Succeeded by The Marquess Curzon of Kedleston
Personal details
Born (1856-07-30)30 July 1856
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Auchterarder, Perthshire
Alma mater Göttingen University
University of Edinburgh
Profession Barrister
17 Charlotte Square, Edinburgh, birthplace of Richard Haldane
Haldane caricatured by Spy in Vanity Fair, 1896

Richard Burdon Haldane, 1st Viscount Haldane KT OM PC KC FRS FSA FBA (/ˈhɔːldn/; 30 July 1856 – 19 August 1928) was an influential British Liberal Imperialist and later Labour politician, lawyer and philosopher. He was Secretary of State for War between 1905 and 1912 during which time the "Haldane Reforms" were implemented. Raised to the peerage as Viscount Haldane in 1911, he was Lord Chancellor between 1912 and 1915, when he was forced to resign because of his German sympathies. He later joined the Labour Party and once again served as Lord Chancellor in 1924 in the first ever Labour administration. Apart from his legal and political careers, Haldane was also an influential writer on philosophy, in recognition of which he was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1914. A radical liberal,[1] Haldane was also, according to historian Martin Pugh, one of the “best supporters” of David Lloyd George’s “People’s Budget.”[2]

Background and education

Haldane was born at 17 Charlotte Square, Edinburgh, the son of Robert Haldane and his wife Mary Elizabeth, daughter of Richard Burdon-Sanderson. He was the grandson of the Scottish evangelist James Alexander Haldane, the brother of respiratory physiologist John Scott Haldane, Sir William Haldane and author Elizabeth Haldane, and the uncle of J. B. S. Haldane and Naomi Mitchison.

He received his first education at the Edinburgh Academy, and then at the Göttingen University He gained a first and MA at University of Edinburgh[3] where he received first-class honours in Philosophy and as Gray scholar and Ferguson scholar in philosophy of the four Scottish Universities.

After studying law in London, he was called to the Bar by Lincoln's Inn, in 1879,[3] and became a successful lawyer. He was taken on at 5 New Square Chambers by Lord Davey in 1882 as the junior. Haldane's practice was a specialism in conveyancing; a particular skill for pleadings at appeal and tribunal cases, bringing cases to the privy council and house of Lords. By 1890 he had made silk, a Queen's Counsel.[4] By 1905 he was earning £20,000 per annum (just over £1.6m at 2010 prices[5]) at the Bar.[6] He joined the elite at Lincoln's Inn being made a bencher in 1893. Amongst his early friends was Edmund Gosse, the scholarly librarian at the inn's law library, whose help made Haldane well known for researching casework. Haldane gained a reputation for being fully prepared in court and parliament briefs.

Haldane was deep thinker, an unusual breed: a philosopher-politician. During his stay at Göttingen he expanded an interest in the German philosophers, Schopenauer and Hegel. He had refused a place at Balliol, but in nodding respect for the Master and philosopher, T H Green, he dedicated his Schopenauer translation The World as Will and Idea which he carried through with a friend, Peter Hume Brown, the Scottish historian.

Early political career

A cousin, the Whig politician Lord Camperdown encouraged the young barrister into standing as a Liberal at the General Election of 1880. Although not elected that year Haldane joined the Eighty Club. The Eighty Club was a political dining and discussion club originally formed in 1879. Membership was restricted to Liberals under the age of forty. In 1881 Haldane met H. H. Asquith, and they soon became firm friends often meeting the Blue Post Public house on Cork street. They were founders of the Albert Grey committee, named after Earl Grey, regularly discussing burning social issues, such as education.

In November 1885 Haldane was elected Liberal Member of Parliament for Haddingtonshire, a seat he held until 1911.[3][7] The philosopher-politician wrote several articles for the advanced and progressive Contemporary Review. In October 1888, "The Liberal Creed" was published summarising his belief in the direction of New Liberalism. In the 1890 article "The Eight Hours Question" Haldane rejected the idea of the eight-hour day. Haldane's hard working and puritanical character informed his own decision to remain a bachelor. In 1888, he courted Emma Valentine Ferguson, sister of his Liberal party friend, Ronald Munro-Ferguson; they were never married and she subsequently lampooned him in her novel "Betsy" in 1892. Haldane became firmly ensconced in the Imperialist wing of Liberalism, led by Sir Edward Grey. At the 1892 General Election, he received a shock, when nearly defeated by the Liberal Unionist Master of Polwarth, Beatrice Webb, the socialist who was a close intimate, remarked on how alone Haldane was in the world.[8] Haldane added the preface to L T Hobhouse's The Labour Movement in 1893. Sadly Emma Ferguson died insane in 1897. He had pathos in his personality, remarked Webb, a successful lawyer tinged with socialism.[9]

Liberal Imperialist

Focusing on his writings, Haldane was passed over for political office, being the only one of his group left outside in the wilderness. Haldane remained an ally of Asquith and Sir Edward Grey on the Liberal Imperialist wing of the party, followers of Lord Rosebery rather than of Sir William Harcourt. Rosebery admired Haldane's intellect: and the Scotsman urged upon his friend, whom he had known since 1886, an assault on Tory power in the Lords in 1894.[10] Haldane joined friends at the Articles Club, including Asquith and Grey. Haldane was disappointed having failed to secure the post of Solicitor-general in October 1894. At the time, Asquith wryly remarked A very wrong decision come to upon inadequate grounds.[11] Haldane was sounded out of the Speakership by Rosebery, but refused it, declaring it to be a political death. The post went eventually to W Gully in 1895.

At a meeting with Beatrice Webb, the Fabian socialist, Haldane told her he was disconsolate at the condition of the Liberal party. Rot has set in there is no hope now but to be beaten and then reconstruct a new party[12] The leaders of the party were exasperated: Although Asquith, Grey and I, wrote Haldane, stuck by him ...we never knew when he would retire and leave us in the lurch. Rosebery lacked planning and direction, in other words.[13] When Rosebery offered the Speakership, he refused it that March.[14] But on 11 October 1896 he wrote Rosebery that he was the leader of a revolution in our party.[15]

In 1902 Haldane was admitted to the Privy Council.[16] The King used his influence and charm to cultivate allies, bringing cross-party groups like The Souls together in consensual amity.[17] The aristocratic Balfour's administration leant on Haldane's philosophy for educational reforms. Asquith and Haldane met with the Conservative Marlborough Set in the king's presence in the nation's grand houses to discuss foreign policy.

After the Conservative government of Arthur Balfour fell in December 1905 there was some speculation that Asquith and his allies Haldane and Sir Edward Grey would refuse to serve unless Campbell-Bannerman accepted a peerage, which would have left Asquith as the real leader in the House of Commons. Haldane had suggested involving the King at Balmoral to 'kick CB upstairs', mistaking the King's amity for the old radical as proof positive.[18] However, the plot (called "The Relugas Compact" after Grey's Scottish lodge where the men met) collapsed when Asquith agreed to serve as Chancellor of the Exchequer under Campbell-Bannerman.[19] One longs for Rosebery had he been coming in to his right place at the head of affairs, we could have gone anywhere with confidence. But it seems now as if this were not to be and we have to do the only thing we can do, which is to resolutely follow a plan of concerted action. The Liberal Party in crisis, had rejected Rosebery with Home Rule firmly on the agenda.[20]

The moderate Relugas Compact collapsed: playing the ball into Rosebery's court. On 13 December 1905, Haldane was appointed Secretary of State for War, although he may have been offered the jobs of Attorney-General and Home Secretary.[6] (Grey became Foreign Secretary).[21] The party won a landslide victory in the 1906 general election. Grey and Rosebery were more reluctant to serve in a cabinet accepting Home Rule in principle. However unity amongst the Liberals guaranteed the biggest electoral majority in the party's history in the general election.[22]

Secretary of State for War

As early as January 1906 Haldane was persuaded by fellow Liberal Imperialist Edward Grey to begin planning for a Continental war in support of the French against the Germans.[23] However, Haldane's first estimates reduced the Army by 16,600 men and reduced expenditure by £2.6m to £28 million, as the Liberals had been elected on a platform of retrenchment.[24] By 1914 Britain spent 3.4% of national income on defence, little more in absolute terms than Austria-Hungary's 6.1%. Army expenditure was determined according to a formula devised by the Esher Committee. In 1900, during the Boer War, army expenditure was £86.8m, by 1910 (a low point, after four years of cuts under the Liberals) it had dropped to £27.6m and by 1914 it had risen back to £29.4m. In March 1914 effective expenditure on the Army, after allowing for increased pensions and £1m set aside for military aviation, was still less than in 1907-8, and £2m less than in 1905-6 (despite a 20% rise in prices since then).[24]

In October 1907 Haldane was intimately involved with the negotiations at Windsor with Kaiser Wilhelm. The Germano-phile and linguist was thrilled to be summoned at 1a.m to talk with the Emperor on arms reduction principles over whisky. But the import was the Baghdad-Berlin railway which Germany was hoping to construct with British approval. A fluent German speaker, Haldane was lulled into a false sense of security believing 'like a bear with a sore head' that he had won a great deal. Haldane's earnest sincerity for idealism was duped into naivety by a manipulative Kaiser's Imperialistic ambition.[25] Another such conference took place at Balmoral in September 1909. The Kaiser arrogantly insisted that only the King was of equal rank. The King perceived the troubles that surrounded the troubled Liberal ministers, afeared for constitutional governance in Europe and for the Lords at home.

Despite these budgetary constraints, Haldane implemented a wide-ranging set of reforms of the Army, aimed at preparing the army for an Imperial war but with the more likely (and secret) task of a European war. The main element of this was the establishment of the British Expeditionary Force of six infantry divisions and one cavalry division.[26] The Official Historian Brigadier Edmonds later wrote that "in every respect the Expeditionary Force of 1914 was incomparably the best trained, best organised and best equipped British Army ever to leave these shores"[27]

Haldane at West Point sometime before the Great War.

Army Reforms

Haldane set up the Imperial General Staff. Before Haldane there was only the Defence Committee of the Cabinet, which only met in emergencies, and the Colonial Defence Committee. Esher had recommended the setting up of an Army Council and the abolition of the post of Commander-in-Chief, but few of his recommendations had been implemented before the change of government in December 1905.[28] Haldane's reforms also created the Territorial Force of 14 divisions (the original plan was for 28) and 14 mounted Yeomanry brigades at home,[26] the Officer Training Corps and the Special Reserve.

In all these reforms Haldane worked closely at the War Office with Major-General Haig – by coincidence both men had been born in Charlotte Square in Edinburgh. J.A.Spender later wrote of how Haldane got the best work out of an able but verbally incoherent soldier (thought to refer to Haig) by not scoring verbal points off him as many politicians would have done.[6]

Usually critical, Rosebery remarked on Haldane's interest in philosophy declaring "I have read his Secret Memorandum, and that was enough." In 1907 and 1908, Haldane passed far-reaching reforms to Army management. He was accredited as an efficient bureaucratic leader, notably founding the Territorial Army in a Second Memorandum.[29] The Force would play a vital part in the Great War effort.

Haldane was also instrumental in the creation the Advisory Committee for Aeronautics in 1909, which provided the fledgling aircraft industry in the United Kingdom with a sound body of science on which to base the development of aircraft for the next seventy years (it was disbanded in 1979).

Philosopher-politician

Throughout his long career and association with the modernisers or 'Limps' Haldane used his considerable intellect to great advantage against economy.[30] During the constitutional and budget crisis of 1909-11, Haldane advised his friend and Prime Minister, Asquith on the legal niceties of his stance towards the monarch, who was outraged at the firebrand speeches from Churchill and Lloyd George. Stumbling from illness to illness, Haldane's own bad health was similar to King Edward's declining fortunes. Two elections ensued, one in January and another in December 1910, before in 1911 he was raised to the peerage as Viscount Haldane, of Cloan in the County of Perth.[31] He became Leader in the Lords, responsible for the passage of the Parliament Act. On Lord Loreburn's retirement in June 1912, Haldane succeeded him as Lord Chancellor,[32] making a self-deprecating speech as to his abilities as a legal expert.[33]

That year saw the unsuccessful attempt of the Haldane Mission, an effort to quell the friction between the United Kingdom and Germany arising because of their naval arms race. It took place February 8–12, 1912. The mission was a failure because, when he arrived, Germany announced the expansion to their navy program. "He was sound in his judgment... and seldom wrong."[34] On 19 May 1913 he was appointed a Knight of the Thistle.

In 1915 Asquith ranked his Cabinet, putting Haldane only sixth amongst the inner cabinet members.[35] He also inveigled Kitchener and Haldane to sign the King's Pledge – which Churchill and Asquith himself completely ignored. Haldane resented the abstinence, and six weeks later resigned, going to the front to meet his old friend General Haig, and cousin General Aylmer Haldane; but he was exhausted in truth on being ejected when the Coalition was formed in May 1915.[36] On 30 July Haig urged along the line a frontal assault, rather than the piercing move strategy to break the line, at first proposed by French. By December, French had joined Haldane in retirement.[37]

1914 crisis

In March 1914, Haldane's successor at the War Office, Jack Seely resigned following the Curragh incident. Rather than appoint a successor, Asquith decided to take over responsibility for the War Office directly himself. Asquith relied heavily on Haldane as the previous War Secretary and empowered him to carry out tasks at the War Office on his behalf. As the situation in Europe worsened, Asquith kept Haldane abreast of developments with Sir Edward Grey at the Foreign Office. Haldane was one of the first members of the Cabinet to recognise that war with Germany was inevitable and persuaded Asquith to mobilise by assembly of the Army Council on 3 August.[38] With war imminent, Asquith was happy for Haldane to continue at the War Office formally as Secretary of State for War but Haldane persuaded him to appoint Field Marshal Kitchener.[39]

File:Rt. Hon. Richard Burdon Haldane.jpg
Rt. Hon. Richard Burdon Haldane

However, following the outbreak of World War One Haldane was falsely accused of pro-German sympathies, in July 1914, for hosting Albert Ballin, a German official. The accusations were widely believed, even being echoed in a popular music hall song ("All dressed up and nowhere to go") in the revue "Mr Manhattan". He was harried in particular by Beaverbrook's Daily Express, which gave great publicity to the claim by Professor Onkel of Heidelberg that he had said "Germany was his spiritual home" – he had in fact said this about Professor Loetze's classroom at Göttingen, at a dinner party given by Mrs. Humphrey Ward in April 1913 to enable him to meet some German professors during his mission.[6] Asquith refused his resignation in Sep 1914, but he was forced to go in May 1915.

As the war progressed, Haldane moved increasingly close to the Labour Party but he was held back by his ties to the Liberal Party and to Asquith. When the Irish War of Independence broke out in 1919, Haldane was one of the first British politicians to argue that the solution lay in compromise rather than force. Having been awarded with Order of Merit in 1915, in the personal gift of George V, he wrote a Memorandum of Events, 1906-15 to defend his reputation published in April 1916.

Contribution to Canadian constitutional law

As Lord Chancellor, Haldane was a member of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, at that time the court of last resort for the Empire. He retained the position even when he was no longer Chancellor. He sat on several cases from Canada dealing with the division of powers between the federal and provincial governments under the Canadian Constitution, particularly the interplay between sections 91 and 92 of the British North America Act 1867. He gave the decision for the Judicial Committee in several of those cases, and showed a marked tendency to favour the provincial powers at the expense of the federal government. For instance, in the case of In re the Board of Commerce Act, 1919, and the Combines and Fair Prices Act,[40] he gave the decision striking down federal legislation which attempted to regulate the economy, challenging the legality of the Canadian legislature.[41] In doing so, he gave very restrictive readings to both the "peace, order and good government" power of the federal government, as well as the federal criminal law power. Similarly, in Toronto Electric Commissioners v. Snider,[42] Lord Haldane struck down a federal statute attempting to regulate industrial disputes, holding that it was not within federal authority under either the peace, order and good government power, nor the federal trade and commerce power. He went so far as to suggest that the trade and commerce power was simply an ancillary federal power, which could not authorise legislation in its own right. The effect of some of these decisions have subsequently been modified by later decisions of the Judicial Committee and the Supreme Court of Canada, but they have had the long-term effect of recognising substantial provincial powers.

Lord Haldane's Plaque at 28 Queen Anne's Gate

Haldane's approach to the division of powers was heavily criticised by some academics and lawyers in Canada, such as F.R. Scott[43] and Chief Justice Bora Laskin, as unduly favouring the provinces over the federal government and depriving it of the powers needed to deal with modern economic issues. More recently, one major study has characterised him as "the wicked stepfather" of the Canadian Constitution.[44]

Influence on education

In 1895 Haldane helped the Webbs found the London School of Economics. A fundamental believer in the power of improving education, he prepared the London University Act 1898. The philosophy of 'national efficiency' was central feature of the Hegelian complex, and the ideas of Schopenauer, he had learnt on the continent, that accentuated freedom and decentralisation from an historicist's perspective.[45] His moral centrism sought to unify The New Liberalism, as he published it in Contemporary Review.[46] From a pan-European perspective he analysed the German character and economic advances towards militarism. He was largely responsible for the cross-party support for Balfour's Education Act 1902. He told Rosebery "a sense of nation is working towards ...a great centre party."[47] He was also involved in the founding of Imperial College in 1907 and in his honour the University contains the Haldane Recreational Library.

Haldane was a member of the Coefficients dining club of social reformers set up in 1902 by the Fabian campaigners Sidney and Beatrice Webb. He wrote a biography of Adam Smith, extollng the virtues of free trade. Unlike Chamberlain, he thought there was no strong connection between fiscal and imperial unity. He opposed any attempt to protection of British trade.[48]

In 1904 he was President of the Edinburgh Sir Walter Scott Club and gave the Toast to Sir Walter at the Club's annual dinner, addressing "The dedicated life" to a group of students on 10 Jan 1907. He also served as second Chancellor of the University of Bristol where he made an important address titled "The Civic University" outlining his educational philosophy in 1911. At the end of his life Lord Haldane was elected Chancellor of the University of St Andrews in June 1928. Perhaps his greatest speech on education was made in House of Lords on 12 July 1916, at the height of the terrible slaughter on the Western Front.[49]

Writings

Haldane co-translated the first English edition of Schopenhauer's The World as Will and Representation, published between 1883 and 1886. He wrote several philosophical works, the best known of which is The Reign of Relativity (1921), which dealt with the philosophical implications of the theory of relativity. Haldane published "The Pathway to Reality", based on the Gifford Lectures which he had delivered at the University of St Andrews.[50] Some of his public addresses have also been published, including The future of democracy (1918).

  • The Pathway to Relativity (1903–04)
  • Army Reform and Other Addresses (1907)
  • The Reign of Relativity (1921)
  • The Philosophy of Humanism and Other Subjects (1922)
  • Human Experience: A Study of its Structure (1926)

Personal life

Haldane had health problems all his life. He suffered from bad rheumatism, a stigmata in the eye and in 1909 had to take bed rest when going blind from iritis. A lifelong walker and cigar smoker, he was diagnosed diabetic. "The latter is a large, fat man" was Haig's initial impression of a dignified but portly demeanour. Yet, added Haig, "One seems to like the man at once." Having worked on the Army Regulations of 1909 Haig applauded, a most clear headed and practical man––very ready to listen and weigh carefully all that is said to him Osbert Sitwell described him as "entering a room with the air of a whole procession". Leo Amery said he looked like "the old-fashioned family butler".[6] Another Imperialist, Winston Churchill also respected Haldane, although they were from differing social backgrounds. On promoting Churchill to First Lord of the Admiralty, Asquith advised him to seek Haldane's advice at a meeting held at Archerfield, North Berwick.[51] From 1907 to 1908 he was president of the Aristotelian Society.

Haldane remained a lifelong bachelor after his fiancée, Miss Valentine Ferguson, broke off their engagement. He died suddenly of heart disease at his home in Auchterarder, Scotland, on 19 August 1928, aged 72.[52] The viscountcy became extinct on his death.

Later Years

In December 1918, Lloyd George appointed Haldane Chairman on 'The Machinery of Government'. But the Armsistice had taken all impetus out of the reform agenda.

Being a fluent German speaker, ascetic philosopher and atheist, he played host to Albert Einstein, when he visited London in 1922. As President of the Institute of Public Administration, he was a leading intellectual on the philosophy of governance. "The Reign of Relativity" combined Haldane's love of all things German expressed by Goethe and his works, with the Hegelian military-industrial complex.[53] Haldane admired the fact that Germans were "trained to obey".[54] Hegel's aristocratic desire for law and order and defence of property against revolution had a mathematical symmetry. Hegel was a purist: his work attempted to keep science and philosophy apart. The rising tide of New Liberalism and moral realism was for Haldane, Hegel's philological precept to improve behavior, using the empiricism of scientific data as a proof.[55]

It was not until the general election of 1923 that Haldane formally sided with Labour, and made several speeches on behalf of Labour candidates.[citation needed] When the Labour government was formed by Ramsay MacDonald in early 1924, Haldane was recruited to serve once again as Lord Chancellor.[56] He was also joint Leader of the Labour Peers with Lord Parmoor. Haldane was a vital member of the Cabinet as he was one of only three members who had sat in a cabinet before; the other two had sat only briefly and for junior posts.[57]

Haldane was responsible for drafting the London University Act 1926, purchasing properties in Euston. He made some famous speeches at Toynbee Hall for the Annual American Seminar.

Styles of address

  • 1856-1885: Mr Richard Burdon Haldane
  • 1885-1890: Mr Richard Burdon Haldane MP
  • 1890-1902: Mr Richard Burdon Haldane KC MP
  • 1902-1906: The Rt Hon Richard Burdon Haldane KC MP
  • 1906-1911: The Rt Hon Richard Burdon Haldane KC MP FRS
  • 1911-1913: The Rt Hon The Viscount Haldane PC KC FRS
  • 1913-1914: The Rt Hon The Viscount Haldane KT PC KC FRS
  • 1914-1915: The Rt Hon The Viscount Haldane KT PC KC FRS FBA
  • 1915-1928: The Rt Hon The Viscount Haldane KT OM PC KC FRS FBA

Legacy

Lord Birkenhead, the Conservative politician, praised Haldane in November 1923 as an exception to the idealism in Britain before the Great War:

In the welter of sentimentality, amid which Great Britain might easily have mouldered into ruin, my valued colleague, Lord Haldane, presented a figure alike interesting, individual, and arresting. In speech fluent and even infinite he yielded to no living idealist in the easy coinage of sentimental phraseology. Here, indeed, he was a match for those who distributed the chloroform of Berlin. Do we not remember, for instance, that Germany was his spiritual home? But he none the less prepared himself, and the Empire, to talk when the time came with his spiritual friends in language not in the least spiritual. He devised the Territorial Army, which was capable of becoming the easy nucleus of national conscription, and which unquestionably ought to have been used for that purpose at the outbreak of war. He created the Imperial General Staff. He founded the Officers' Training Corps.[58]

On Haldane’s death The Times described him as “one of the most powerful, subtle and encyclopaedic intellects ever devoted to the public service of his country”.[6]

The military historian Correlli Barnett claimed Haldane had "all-round personal talents far exceeding those of his predecessors" as Secretary of State for War and was "a man of first-class intellect and wide education".[59] Walter Reid believed Haldane to be the greatest of the Secretary for War.

See also

Notes

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  4. The London Gazette: no. 26018. p. 475. 28 January 1890.
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  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 Reid 2006, p132
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  8. Beatrice Webb, Our Partnership, 98.
  9. Diary of Beatrice Webb, 345
  10. Letter from Haldane to Rosebery, 6 June 1894, Rosebery Collection, National Library Scotland.
  11. Leo McKinstry, 'Rosebery: Statesman in Turmoil' (2005), 335.
  12. Diary of Beatrice Webb, 20 January 1895, Passfield Papers, cited in McKinstry, 338-9.
  13. Note to his letters, Haldane Collection, NLS.
  14. Haldane Mss NLS 5951.
  15. G Matthew, Life of Richard Burdon Haldane, 22.
  16. The London Gazette: no. 27464. p. 5174. 12 August 1902.
  17. Jane Ridley, "Bertie: A Life of Edward VII" (Chatto & Windus, London, 2012)
  18. Jane Ridley, "Bertie", p.397-98.
  19. McKinstry, L, (2005) Rosebery: Statesman in Turmoil, John Murray, p 467-8
  20. Letter from Lord Haldane to Sir Francis Knollys, Private Secretary to Edward VII on 12 September 1905, Haldane MSS, National Library Scotland
  21. The London Gazette: no. 27862. p. 8893. 8 December 1905.
  22. McKinstry, 476
  23. He invited Colonel Huguet, the French Military Attache to Plan at War Office from Jan 1906, (R B Haldane, "Before the War" 1920)
  24. 24.0 24.1 Reid 2006, p136-7
  25. Dudley Sommers, "Haldane of Cloan", passim; Ridley, "Bertie", p.414-15; Haldane, "Autobiography", passim, for his character.
  26. 26.0 26.1 Reid 2006, p134
  27. Reid 2006, p140
  28. Reid 2006, p138
  29. Soiers, "History of the British Army", p.95.
  30. Charles Hobhouse, "Inside Asquith's Cabinet" p.51-2.
  31. The London Gazette: no. 28480. p. 2522. 28 March 1911.
  32. Heuston, p.166 ff.
  33. Haldane, My Autobiography, p.253.
  34. Lord Dunedin in Pringle-Pattion, p.443.
  35. Charles Hobhouse, "Diaries: Inside the Asquith Cabinet" (Hodder & Stoughton, 1977)
  36. Jenkins, "Churchill", p.268n
  37. Jenkins, Churchill, 268.
  38. F.D.Maurice, "Haldane", I, p.355.
  39. F.D. Maurice, "Haldane" I, p.355.
  40. In re the Board of Commerce Act, 1919, and the Combines and Fair Prices Act, 1919 [1922] 1 A.C. 191
  41. In 1912 Haldane visited the Canadian Bar in Montreal, Quebec Province, described in "The Conduct of Life and Other Addresses" (published 1914).
  42. Toronto Electric Commissioners v. Snider, [1925] AC 396.
  43. F.R. Scott, Some Privy Counsel (1950), 28 Can. Bar. Rev. 780.
  44. Vaughan, Viscount Haldane: 'The Wicked Step-father of the Canadian Constitution'. University of Toronto Press: Toronto, 2010.
  45. Viscount Haldane: 'The Wicked Step-father of the Canadian Constitution'. University of Toronto Press: Toronto, 2010.
  46. Contemporary Review, (London 1892),
  47. Matthew, The Liberal Imperialists, 145 – from a letter of 6 October 1902
  48. Preface to P Ashley "Modern Tariff History" (1904); and Matthews, 166–168.
  49. Ashby & Anderson, p.135.
  50. Reid 2006, p136
  51. Haldane was impressed by the younger man's public speech at Bradford on 15 July 1898 during his early radicalism.
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  53. "A Hegelian Army" - Haldane, "Autobiography", p.183-5.
  54. R B Haldane, "Before the War" (1920)
  55. Haldane, "Philosophy of Humanism" (1922); "Philosophy of Human Experience" (1926).
  56. The London Gazette: no. 32901. p. 769. 25 January 1924.
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  58. Lord Birkenhead, ‘Idealism in International Politics. A Rectorial Address, Delivered on November 23rd' (Peterborough: The Peterborough Press, n.d.), p. 9.
  59. Correlli Barnett, Britain and Her Army (London: Allen Lane, 1970), p. 362, p. 388.

Bibliography

  • 1st Viscount Haldane papers, National Library of Scotland.
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External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Haddingtonshire
18851911
Succeeded by
John Deans Hope
Political offices
Preceded by Secretary of State for War
1905–1912
Succeeded by
J. E. B. Seely
Preceded by Lord Chancellor
1912–1915
Succeeded by
The Lord Buckmaster
Preceded by Lord Chancellor
1924
Succeeded by
The Viscount Cave
Preceded by Leader of the House of Lords
1924
Succeeded by
The Marquess Curzon of Kedleston
Party political offices
New office Leader of the Labour Party in the House of Lords
1924–1928
Succeeded by
The Lord Parmoor
Academic offices
Preceded by Rector of the University of Edinburgh
1905–1908
Succeeded by
George Wyndham
Preceded by Chancellor of the University of Bristol
1912–1928
Succeeded by
Winston Churchill
Preceded by Chancellor of the University of St Andrews
1928
Succeeded by
Stanley Baldwin
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Viscount Haldane
1911–1928
Extinct