Addison, Christopher Addison, 1st Viscount, Baron Addison Of Stallingborough

Addison, Christopher Addison, 1st Viscount, Baron Addison Of Stallingborough

▪ British statesman
born June 19, 1869, Hogsthorpe, Lincolnshire, England
died December 11, 1951, West Wycombe, Buckinghamshire

      British surgeon and statesman who was prominent in both Liberal and Labour governments between the wars and after World War II.

      Addison was educated at Trinity College, Harrogate, Yorkshire, and at St. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College, London. He became an anatomy lecturer at St. Bartholomew's, professor of anatomy at University College, Sheffield, and, in 1901, Hunterian professor at the Royal College of Surgeons, London. Elected Liberal member of Parliament in 1910, he was parliamentary secretary to the Board of Education (1914–15), minister of munitions (1916–17), minister in charge of postwar reconstruction (1917), and first minister of health (1919–21). He promoted an ambitious state-subsidized housing scheme, which caused an outcry against the heavy burden upon the taxpayers it would involve and which strained the hitherto close relations between himself and David Lloyd George, the prime minister. In 1921 Addison was transferred to a ministry without portfolio, and in the same year he resigned from the government altogether.

      In 1922 he transferred his allegiance to the Labour Party; (Labour Party) that same year he published The Betrayal of the Slums and, in 1926, Practical Socialism. In the 1929 general election Addison was returned to Parliament, in the Labour interest, and the new prime minister, Ramsay MacDonald (MacDonald, Ramsay), appointed him parliamentary secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries (1929–30) and minister of agriculture and fisheries (1930–31). In 1937 he was created a baron, and, when the Labour Party was returned to power in 1945, he was elevated to a viscountcy and appointed dominions secretary, remaining in charge when this department became the Commonwealth Relations Office in 1947. In the same year, however, he asked to be relieved of some of his heavy duties because of his responsibilites as leader of the House of Lords, and he was appointed lord privy seal. In 1948–49 he was paymaster general. When in March 1951 Herbert Morrison became foreign secretary, Addison succeeded him as lord president of the council.

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Universalium. 2010.

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