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Encyclopedia > Charles Frederick Gurney Masterman

Charles Frederick Gurney Masterman (October 25, 1874-November 17, 1927) was a British Liberal politician and journalist.


He was elected as a Liberal MP in 1906.


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.


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from the era when Parliament had sought to curb the influence of the Crown on MPs, which would be amended and finally repealed altogether in the next twelve years.


He served as head of the British War Propaganda Bureau (WPB) during the First World War. In this role, he recruited writers such as John Buchan and Arthur Conan Doyle to support the war effort.


Masterman eventually returned to the House of Commons in the 1923 general election but by this point the Liberal Party was in decline and, like most other Liberals, he lost his seat in the 1924 general election.


He married Lucy Blanche Lyttelton (1884 - 1977), a poet and writer, in 1908. Her biography of him was published in 1939.


External links

  • Full text of 'The Condition of England' (http://www.pmb.net/cgi/textsrv.tcl?txtfile=ENGLAND.txt)
Preceded by:
Charles Edward Henry Hobhouse
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster
1914–1915
Followed by:
Edwin Samuel Montagu







  Results from FactBites:
 
Amazon.co.uk: Biography of Charles Masterman (1873-1927) Politician and Journalist: The Spendid Failure (Studies in ... (1274 words)
This biography of Charles Masterman is based on the Masterman papers at the University of Birmingham library and places Masterman in his political and social context.
Masterman is unique, I think, in epitomising the exact moment when the fundamentally moral basis of Liberal thought (a 19th century creation) met the economics of 20th century collectivism.
Charles Masterman was an effective advocate of the New Liberalism of collectivist action on behalf of the disadvantaged.
Charles Frederick Gurney Masterman - definition of Charles Frederick Gurney Masterman in Encyclopedia (318 words)
Charles Frederick Gurney Masterman (October 25, 1874-November 17, 1927) was a British Liberal politician and journalist.
Masterman lost his own seat, though this was not uncommon, and stood in two further seats, losing each time.
Masterman eventually returned to the House of Commons in the 1923 general election but by this point the Liberal Party was in decline and, like most other Liberals, he lost his seat in the 1924 general election.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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