Online Encyclopedia
Categories: British Prime Ministers | British Secretaries of State | Leaders of the British Liberal Party
Henry Campbell-Bannerman
Period in Office: | 5 December, 1905 - 3 April, 1908 |
PM Predecessor: | Arthur James Balfour |
PM Successor: | Herbert Asquith |
Date of Birth: | 9 July 1836 |
Place of Birth: | Glasgow, Scotland |
Political Party: | Liberal |
Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman (July 9, 1836 - April 22, 1908) was a British Liberal politician who served as Prime Minister from December 5 1905 until resigning due to ill health on April 3 1908.
Campbell-Bannerman was born in Glasgow in 1836 as "Henry Campbell" and educated at Glasgow High School before going on to study at both Glasgow and Cambridge universities. In 1868 he was elected to the House of Commons as a Liberal, and 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 for War, where his most notable accomplishment was persuading the Duke of Cambridge, the Queen's cousin, and on obstacle to necessary army reforms, 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 job holding together the strongly divided party, and when the Liberals returned to power in 1905, he became Prime Minister.
Campbell-Bannerman's premiership was a frustrating one, as the Conservative Lords blocked most of the Liberals' reform measures, but it did see the achievement of an Entente with Russia in 1907 by his Foreign Secretary, Sir Edward Grey. In that same year, Campbell-Bannerman achieved the honour of becoming the Father of the House but his health took a turn for the worse, and he died early in 1908. He was succeeded as Prime Minister by his Chancellor of the Exchequer, Herbert Henry Asquith.
Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman's Government, December 1905 - April 1908
- Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman - Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury
- Lord Loreburn - Lord Chancellor
- Lord Houghton - Lord President of the Council
- Lord Ripon - Lord Privy Seal
- Herbert Henry Asquith - Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Herbert John 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 Burdon 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 Hartley 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 Vernon Harcourt, the First Commissioner of Public Works, enters the Cabinet.
Preceded by: George Otto Trevelyan |
Chief Secretary for Ireland 1884–1885 |
Followed by: Sir William Hart Dyke |
Preceded by: The Viscount Cranbrook |
Secretary of State for War 1886 |
Followed by: William Henry Smith |
Preceded by: Edward Stanhope |
Secretary of State for War 1892–1895 |
Followed by: The Marquess of Lansdowne |
Preceded by: Sir William Harcourt |
Leader of the British Liberal Party 1899–1908 |
Followed by: Herbert Henry Asquith |
Preceded by: Arthur James Balfour |
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 1905–1908 |
Followed by: Herbert Henry Asquith |
Categories: British Prime Ministers | British Secretaries of State | Leaders of the British Liberal Party