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  Henderson, Arthur
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationLabour  
<-  1930-01-01  
 
NameArthur Henderson
Address
, , United Kingdom
EmailNone
WebsiteNone
Born September 13, 1863
DiedOctober 20, 1935 (72 years)
ContributorThomas Walker
Last ModifedNew Jerusalem
Feb 05, 2012 02:04pm
Tags Scottish - Union Member - Methodist -
InfoArthur Henderson (September 13, 1863-October 20, 1935) was born in Glasgow, the son of David Henderson, a manual worker. When his father died in 1872, leaving the family in poverty, Arthur left school to work in a photographer's shop. Upon his mother's remarriage the family moved to Newcastle-upon-Tyne, where Arthur returned to school for three years. Aged twelve, he became an apprentice at the Robert Stephenson and Sons' General Foundry Works. The dinner hour in the foundry, with its lively discussions, became his classroom and the newspapers his textbooks. Having joined the Ironfounders' Union at the age of eighteen when he achieved journeyman status, he was elected within a short time secretary of the Newcastle lodge and for the remainder of his life held office continuously in his union at the local, district, or national level.

In the course of his work in the Methodist church, which he had joined as a young man, Henderson met Eleanor Watson and married her in 1888. They had a daughter and three sons. The eldest of the three sons, all of whom served in the armed forces in World War I, was killed in action; the other two became the father's colleagues in the House of Commons in the last decade or so of his life.

The skill in speaking that he developed at the meetings of the Tyneside Debating Society and in his work as a lay preacher, helped to launch him on a political career begun with his election to the post of town councillor in 1892. In the same year he was chosen by his union to be their district delegate, a full-time salaried position. In 1896 he moved his family to Darlington; there, he was elected to the Durham County Council and in 1903 became the first Labor mayor of Darlington.

From 1900 to the close of his life Henderson put his talent for organizing at the disposal of Labor. He attended the London conference which set up the Labor Representation Committee in 1900, won election to Parliament in 1903 under the sponsorship of that committee, chaired the conference in 1906 which formed the Labor Party, acted as its secretary from 1911 to 1934, served several times as the chairman of the party's executive committee, in 1918 took the lead in revising the party's constitution so as to open its membership to those who by conviction, not necessarily vocation, wanted to join the party, and created a political machinery which made the party a power in the political life of the nation.

Henderson himself was almost continuously in Parliament after 1903, yet his electoral career was scarcely a smooth one, for in ten tries at the polls in general elections he lost five and won five but regained a seat after each of the losses by winning by-elections. Henderson was chairman of the parliamentary Labor Party, chief whip three times, president of the Board of Education (1915-1916) and paymaster-general (1916) in Asquith's government, and in Lloyd George's government a minister without portfolio, acting primarily as an adviser on labor questions.

As World War I drew to a close, Henderson's thinking took on an international dimension. In 1917 he went to Russia as an official observer for the British government; in 1918 he broke with Lloyd George over his refusal to send delegates to a proposed international conference of socialists, a conference which, as it turned out, was never convened. In the same year he initiated the call for a conference at Bern, with delegates from the defeated and neutral nations joining those of the victorious, to formulate recommendations to send to Versailles where the representatives of the Allies were assembling to draw up the terms of the peace. In 1923 he was chairman of the Labor and Socialist International at Hamburg. In 1924 he was home secretary in MacDonald's cabinet, but spent most of his energy on two international problems: the implementation of the Dawes Plan for German reparations and the drafting of the Geneva Protocol on the ultimate settlement of international disputes by arbitration.

With this background, he was, therefore, quite prepared to accept the office of foreign secretary when MacDonald offered it to him in 1929 upon forming his second government. In his two years in office he brought about Britain's resumption of diplomatic relations with Russia, severed since 1917, maneuvered acceptance of the Young Plan for German reparations by the creditor nations and Germany, arranged with Briand for the evacuation of French troops from the Rhineland prior to the date stipulated in the Versailles Treaty, furthered the cause of Egyptian independence, actually achieved in 1936, and attended the entire sessions of the Tenth and Eleventh Assemblies of the League of Nations.

Henderson became the embodiment of the League's disarmament effort. In January, 1931, he prodded the Council into completing preparations for the calling of a Disarmament Conference; in May of that year, he was unanimously approved as president of the conference; on February 2, 1932, he presided over the opening session. Despite his determined and persistent work, the conference failed. The world was stricken with an economic depression; Germany, under Hitler, withdrew from the conference in October, 1933; Henderson was barely able to hold the conference together in 1934, but even as late as December of that year at the Nobel ceremonies in Oslo, he optimistically insisted that the conference was still very much alive. The failure of the conference foreshadowed World War II, but his biographer, Mary A. Hamilton, states1, «If any man is clear of responsibility, it is Arthur Henderson.»

Henderson was a strong man. His powerful physical presence was the outer counterpart of his inner moral integrity. He had the qualities, Clement Attlee remarked in his eulogy on Henderson in the House of Commons2, needed «in a working ironworker to rise to preside over the Assembly of the nations».

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NEWS
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DISCUSSION
Importance? 9.00000 Average

FAMILY
Son Arthur Henderson, Jr. 1893-1968

INFORMATION LINKS
RACES
  10/10/1934 Nobel Peace Prize Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  10/10/1933 Nobel Peace Prize Lost 0.00% (-100.00%)
  09/01/1933 UK Parliament - Clay Cross - By-election Won 69.27% (+49.40%)
  10/27/1931 UK Prime Minister Lost 8.46% (-81.95%)
  10/27/1931 UK Parliament - Burnley Lost 43.03% (-13.12%)
  10/10/1931 Nobel Peace Prize Lost 0.00% (-50.00%)
  08/31/1931 Labour Party Leader Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  06/07/1929 UK Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  05/29/1929 UK Parliament - Burnley Won 46.26% (+13.10%)
  10/29/1924 UK Parliament - Burnley Won 45.43% (+9.87%)
  02/28/1924 UK Parliament - Burnley - By-election Won 58.36% (+16.71%)
  01/23/1924 UK Secretary of State for the Home Department Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  12/06/1923 UK Parliament - Newcastle upon Tyne East Lost 47.68% (-4.65%)
  01/17/1923 UK Parliament - Newcastle upon Tyne East - By-election Won 45.67% (+18.09%)
  11/15/1922 UK Parliament - Widnes Lost 46.77% (-6.46%)
  08/30/1919 UK Parliament - Widnes - By-election Won 52.26% (+4.52%)
  12/14/1918 UK Parliament - East Ham South Lost 26.93% (-15.80%)
  08/04/1914 Labour Party Leader Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
  02/10/1910 UK Prime Minister Lost 5.97% (-34.93%)
  01/21/1908 Labour Party Leader Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
ENDORSEMENTS