Harold Macmillan
1894 - 1986
Harold
Macmillan was half-American by parentage, the son of a publisher who
had raised the family from a humble background. Chelsea-born, he was
educated at Eton and later at Balliol College, Oxford, where he
excelled.
He was wounded three times whilst serving in the First World War.
For a time he worked for his family's publishing firm before being
elected in 1924 as the Conservative MP for Stockton-on-Tees - a
depressed industrial town. The run-down state of the area and the
hardship of its people had a profound effect on him. During his early
parliamentary career he was a member of a left-wing group within the
party which pressed for social reform.
In 1936-37 he resigned the whip for a short time to write The
Middle Way, which defined his centrist Conservative beliefs.
In 1940 Macmillan was appointed a junior minister, and in 1942
became the Resident Minister at Allied Forces HQ in the Mediterranean,
where he became a friend of General Eisenhower. He lost his seat in
1945 but returned very soon after in the Bromley by-election. He
represented the Opposition until 1951, with responsibility for
economic and industrial matters.
With the Conservatives victory in 1951 Macmillan joined the Cabinet
as Minister for Housing. He proved himself an effective minister,
overseeing the building of almost one million new homes. In 1954 he
became Minister for Defence, and in 1955 Anthony Eden appointed him as
Foreign Secretary. However, Eden wished to control foreign affairs
personally, and nine months later Macmillan was moved against his will
to become Chancellor of the Exchequer. Macmillan initially supported
the action taken by Eden over the Suez Crisis, but later changed his
stance.
Following Eden's resignation, and despite widespread predictions
that the job of PM would go to Rab Butler, the Queen invited Macmillan
to form a government. Macmillan himself initially expected his tenure
to be short-lived. Instead, he had considerable success in restoring
both party and national morale and confidence. He presided over a time
of prosperity and the easing of Cold War relations on the
international stage.
It was at this time that he gained the nickname 'Supermac', and in
1959 won a comfortable victory in the general election. However, the
second term was not so problem-free. Britain's application for
membership of the EEC split the Conservative party, and was eventually
rejected by General de Gaulle. Inflation and slow growth affected the
economy. Macmillan's handling of the Profumo Affair scandal was judged
to be poor.
In 1962 the government's general unpopularity led Macmillan to
abruptly dismiss six Cabinet members, an event which became known as
the 'night of the long knives'. Macmillan fell ill in 1963 and,
believing his condition to be more serious than it was, resigned.
In 1964 he retired from the House of Commons and declined a
peerage. Instead he worked on his memoirs, at the publishing house,
and as chancellor of Oxford University. He eventually returned to
Parliament in 1984 as an hereditary peer. He died in 1986 aged 92 -
the greatest age attained by a PM until Lord Callaghan's death in
2005. His last words were 'I think I will go to sleep now'. |