Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home, Baron Home of the
Hirsel,
KT,
PC (2 July 1903
– 9 October 1995),
14th Earl of Home from 1951 to
1963, was a British
Conservative politician, and served as
Prime Minister of the
United Kingdom for a year from October 1963 to October 1964 (as
Sir Alec Douglas-Home).
He was the last member
of the House of
Lords
to be appointed Prime Minister and the only Prime
Minister to renounce his peerage to leave
the House of Lords and contest a by-election to enter the House of
Commons
. He was also the only Prime Minister to have
played
first class cricket and
the first British Prime Minister to have been born in the 20th
century.
Early life
Douglas-Home was born in Mayfair
, Westminster
, England, the eldest of seven children born to
Charles, Lord
Dunglass, (the oldest son of the 12th Earl of Home)
and Lady Lilian Lambton,
daughter of Frederick Lambton, 4th
Earl of Durham. His mother was the
great-great-granddaughter of the reforming Prime Minister
Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey.
After his father's succession to the Earldom in 1918 he held the
courtesy title Lord
Dunglass. One of his brothers was the
dramatist William
Douglas-Home.
Home was
educated at Eton
College
and Christ Church, Oxford
, where he graduated with a Third Class
Honours MA
in Modern History in 1925. At
Eton, his contemporaries included
Cyril
Connolly, who later described him as "a votary of the esoteric
Eton religion, the kind of graceful, tolerant, sleepy boy who is
showered with all the laurels, who is liked by the masters and
admired by the boys without any apparent exertion on his part".
Connolly famously concluded, "in the eighteenth century he would
have become Prime Minister before he was 30: as it was he appeared
honourably ineligible for the struggle of life".In 1936 he married
Elizabeth
Alington, the daughter of
Cyril
Alington, who had been Douglas-Home's headmaster at Eton. They
had four children: Caroline, Meriel, Diana and David.
Cricket career
Home was a talented
cricketer at school,
club and county level, and is the only British prime minister to
have played
first-class cricket.
Amongst others he represented the
MCC,
Middlesex CCC and
Oxford University Cricket
Club at first-class level, playing under the name "Lord
Dunglass", his title at the time. Between 1924 and 1927, Dunglass
played 10 first-class matches, scoring 147 runs at an average of
16.33 and with a best score of 37 not out. As a right-arm
fast-medium bowler he took 12 wickets at an average of 30.25 with a
best of 3 for 43. Three of his first-class games were
internationals against
Argentina on the MCC 'representative'
tour of South America in 1926-27.
After Douglas-Home had retired as prime minister, he became
president of the MCC in 1966. Between 1977 and 1989 he was Governor
of
I Zingari, the well-known nomadic
cricket team.
Member of Parliament
Home
became the Scottish Unionist
Party Member of Parliament
(MP) for Lanark
in 1931. His high birth gave him a head
start in Parliament, and he served as
Parliamentary Private
Secretary (1937-1939) to
Neville
Chamberlain, witnessing at first hand the latter's attempts to
stave off
World War II through
negotiation with
Adolf
Hitler. Douglas-Home fell gravely ill with spinal
tuberculosis in 1938, which kept him immobile
on his back for two years and prevented him from fighting in World
War II.
Home lost his parliamentary seat in the Conservatives' landslide
defeat in the
1945
general election, but regained it in 1950. However he was
automatically disqualified from the Commons in 1951 when he
inherited his father's seat in the House of Lords, becoming the
14th Earl of Home.
Lord Home, as he then was, served not only as Commonwealth
Secretary from 1955 during the time of the
Suez Crisis but, from 1957, also as
Leader of the House of Lords
and
Lord President of the
Council (the latter twice; briefly in 1957 and subsequently
from 1959). Home traded all three for the
Foreign Office in
1960. In 1962, he was created a knight of the
Order of the Thistle — the highest
Scottish honour and in the personal gift of the Monarch — which
entitled him to be styled "Sir" after later renouncing his
earldom.
Appointment as Prime Minister
On 18 October 1963, Conservative Prime Minister
Harold Macmillan suddenly resigned
following
prostate trouble from which he
feared he would not recover, though ultimately he did make a full
recovery and survived another 23 years to live to the age of 92. At
the time, the Conservative Party had no formal procedure for
selecting a leader, merely a series of confused precedents.
The Queen was
expected to choose a new Prime Minister on the basis of advice
given by the party's
elder
statesmen.
Home did not originally seek the office of prime minister, being
apparently quite content to serve in the House of Lords and hold
the office of foreign secretary. But Home was put forth by
Macmillan as a compromise candidate, and was persuaded to enter the
race. Though
Rab Butler, nominally the
"Deputy Prime Minister" (officially no such constitutional office
then existed, with the title on its rare usages being an honorary
one), was the favourite among Conservative MPs, Home was preferred
by the elder statesmen, some of whom indicated that they would
refuse to serve in cabinet under Butler or the other potential
candidate,
Quintin Hogg.
Macmillan was apparently determined not to allow Butler to succeed
him.
Macmillan's resignation took place at the time of the 1963
Conservative Party Conference, which rapidly became something akin
to an American political convention as various candidates and their
supporters jostled publicly for the position. Following a series of
consultations to determine who could command support from across
the party and prove the best compromise candidate, Macmillan
advised Elizabeth II. Though it was argued that he had no right to
advise the Queen as to whom to invite to
kiss
hands as Prime Minister, and the Queen was under no obligation
to accept his advice, the Queen duly invited the Earl of Home to
become Prime Minister and
First Lord of the Treasury.
Elizabeth
II first invited Home to Buckingham Palace
for a meeting, and granted him 24 hours to
determine whether he could successfully form an administration;
Home determined that he could do so.
Home, the first prime minister born in the 20th century, believed
it would not be practical to serve as PM from the Lords. It was
widely believed that
Lord
Curzon had not been invited to become prime minister in 1923
because of his seat in the Lords. Using the
Peerage Act 1963, which had only been
passed earlier in the same year after
Tony
Benn's campaign to renounce his peerage, Home disclaimed his
Earldom and other peerages on 23 October 1963. For the next two
weeks he belonged to neither House of Parliament - an extremely
uncommon (although not unique ) occurrence for a sitting Prime
Minister. As "Sir Alec Douglas-Home", he contested a
by-election in
the safe seat of
Kinross
& West Perthshire. Home duly won on 8 November 1963,
entering the history books as the last peer to become prime
minister and the only prime minister to resign from the Lords to
enter the Commons.
Defeat and opposition
Linked as it was to the damaged former government's
Profumo Affair of 1963, Douglas-Home's tenure
as prime minister lasted only one year. The
October 1964 general
election was won by the
Labour
Party under the new leadership of
Harold Wilson. However, the margin of victory
proved narrow and the election thus provided a much sterner test
for Wilson than expected. Indeed it was in this campaign that Home
made his most famous remark. Wilson kept telling Home that he was
not a man of the people, as he was the 14th Earl of Home. Home
responded, "as far as the 14th Earl is concerned I suppose that Mr.
Wilson, when you come to think of it, is the 14th Mr.
Wilson".
Home remained leader of the party until his resignation in July of
the following year. At this time, Home himself revised the rules of
the Conservative Party to allow the party leader to be henceforth
selected by a series of ballots of all Conservative MPs. The
resulting leadership election was won by
Edward Heath, who defeated
Reginald Maudling and
Enoch Powell. Over the following six years,
Home was notably loyal to Heath, comparing those who questioned his
position with impatient gardeners who would keep digging up a tree
to gauge its progress by examining its roots.
Return to government
In 1970, Heath became prime minister, Home returned to the post of
Foreign Secretary, which was deemed to suit him well. , Home is the
last former Prime Minister to take a Ministry in someone else's
cabinet.
Retirement
In 1973 Home intimated his intention to retire from Parliament and
government at the next general election, but was overtaken by the
calling of a
snap general
election in February 1974. Following the defeat of the Heath
government by that of
Harold Wilson in
1974, Home retired from front-line politics, standing down from the
Commons at the
October 1974
election.
In the 1979
Devolution referendum, Home made a high profile statement
arguing that an incoming Conservative Government would introduce a
better
Scottish Assembly. In the
event, Margaret Thatcher's government did not do so.
From 1977 to 1980, he chaired the
Bilderberg Group meetings (1977 - 1980),
replacing
Prince Bernhard.
Personal life
Home was
restored to the House of Lords when he accepted a life peerage, becoming known as Baron
Home of the Hirsel, of Coldstream in Berwickshire (The
Hirsel being his family seat in Berwickshire
), and continued to appear in the House of Lords
into his nineties. , Home ranks as the
third-longest-lived
British Prime Minister, behind
James
Callaghan and
Harold Macmillan.
His autobiography,
The Way The Wind Blows, was published
in 1976. He was also the author of
Peaceful Change (1964)
and
Border Reflections (1979). His correspondence with his
grandson
Matthew Darby was published
as
Letters to a Grandson in 1983.
Death
On his death at The Hirsel in 1995, aged 92, Home was succeeded as
Earl of Home by his only son,
David Douglas-Home. He
also had three daughters,
Lady Caroline Douglas-Home DL,
Lady Meriel Darby (who married
Adrian Darby OBE) and
Lady Diana Wolfe Murray (who married
James Wolfe Murray).
Attempted kidnapping
In 2008, it was revealed that a plot to kidnap Home in 1964 was
foiled by the PM himself. Two left-wing students from the
University of Aberdeen had planned to
kidnap the PM. Home had even encountered the two students earlier
in the day when he gave them £1 for a charity in return for not
kidnapping him, which the PM took as a joke. The students tailed
his car as he drove to meet a Scottish Minister. They had intended
to force his car to crash or block it then kidnap him; however,
they lost their nerve. Instead they just decided to go to the home
of the couple Home was meeting. Home was alone and when they rang
the bell he answered. The kidnappers told Home that they planned to
kidnap him. Home's response was to say “I suppose you realise if
you do the Conservatives will win the election by 200 or 300.”
After packing several things he offered them some beer which the
kidnappers accepted and Home convinced them to abandon their plot.
Home never spoke of the kidnapping because he did not want to ruin
the career of his bodyguard. Home related the story in 1977 to the
former Lord Chancellor
Quintin Hogg
and it is recorded in his diaries.In July 2009, BBC Radio 4
broadcast a fictionalised dramatisation of this reported event
entitled The Night They Tried to Kidnap the Prime Minister, written
by Martin Jameson and starring Tim McInnerny as Alec Douglas
Home.
Titles from birth to death
- The Hon. Alec Douglas-Home (1903 – 1918)
- Lord Dunglass (1918 – 1931) [this was a courtesy title]
- Lord Dunglass, MP (1931 – 1945)
- Lord Dunglass (1945 – 1950)
- Lord Dunglass, MP (1950 – 1951)
- The Rt. Hon. Lord Dunglass, MP (1951)
- The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Home, PC (1951 – 1962)
- The Rt. Hon. The Earl of Home, KT, PC (1962 – 1963)
- The Rt. Hon. Sir Alec Douglas-Home, KT (1963)
- The Rt. Hon. Sir Alec Douglas-Home, KT, MP (1963 – 1974)
- The Rt. Hon. Sir Alec Douglas-Home, KT (1974)
- The Rt. Hon. The Lord Home of the Hirsel, KT, PC (1974 –
1995)
Nicknames
Home was
constantly referred to as 'Baillie Vass' by the satirical magazine
Private
Eye
. This running joke began in 1964 when a
provincial newspaper, the
Aberdeen Evening Express
accidentally used a picture of Home over a caption referring to a
baillie called Vass.
Private Eye
then affected to believe that Home was an impostor whom the
newspaper had unmasked, and the magazine maintained this conceit
until Home's death.
Sir Alec Douglas-Home's Government, October 1963 – October
1964
Changes
- April 1964: Quintin Hogg
becomes Secretary of State for Education and Science. Sir Edward
Boyle leaves the Cabinet.
Notes
- Family name pronounced 'Hume'
- The Tarnished Crown, by Anthony Holden, London 1993, Viking
Publishers, ISBN 0-670-84624-4, p. 209
- Royal: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, by
Robert Lacey,
Little, Brown publishers, London 2002, ISBN 0-316-85940-0, pp.
215-216.
- The Tarnished Crown, by Anthony Holden, London 1993, Viking
Publishers, ISBN 0-670-84624-4, p. 211
References
- Dickie, J. (1964). The Uncommon Commoner: A Study of Sir
Alec Douglas-Home, Pall Mall.
- Douglas-Home, Alec, Sir. (1964). Peaceful Change.
- Dutton, D. (2006). Alec Douglas-Home (20 British Prime
Ministers of the 20th Century), Haus Publishing.
- Home of the Hirsel, Lord. (1976). The Way the Wind Blows:
An Autobiography, London: Collins.
- Home of the Hirsel, Lord. (1979). Border Reflections,
London: Collins
- Home of the Hirsel, Lord. (1983). Letters to a
Grandson, London: HarperCollins.
- Hughes, E. (1964). Sir Alec Douglas-Home, Housman
- Thorpe, D.R. (1996). Alec
Douglas-Home, Sinclair-Stevenson
- Young, K. (1971). Sir Alec Douglas-Home, Fairleigh
Dickinson
External links