George Joachim Goschen : the transformation of a Victorian liberal

Bibliographic Information

George Joachim Goschen : the transformation of a Victorian liberal

[by] Thomas J. Spinner, Jr

(Conference on British studies. Biographical series)

Cambridge University Press, 1973

Available at  / 15 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 246-250

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The career of George Joachim Goschen, the man whom Lord Randolph Churchill forgot, illuminates many of the problems faced by the British ruling classes in the late nineteenth century: a Liberal in 1863, Goschen entered the twentieth century a Conservative. In examining his life and career, Professor Spinner shows how this transition took place and how it typified the reaction of many Victorian statesmen to the massive social and economic changes of the period. The son of a German immigrant merchant banker, thoroughly Anglicized by Rugby and Oxford, Goschen had no difficulty in rising to the highest positions of political and economic power. Elected to the Commons in 1863, he served successively in Lord Russell's Cabinet and at the Poor Law Board and the Admiralty during Gladstone's first Ministry.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Rugby, Oxford - and Ambalema
  • 2. The 'Fortunate Youth' enters politics
  • 3. Paupers and admirals 1868-1874
  • 4. Egypt and electoral reform
  • 5. Diplomacy and harem ladies 1880-1881
  • 6. The 'Moderate' Liberals 1881-1885
  • 7. The Irish Nationalists and the election of 1885
  • 8. Her Majesty aids the Opposition
  • 9. Budgets, gold and the Conservative leadership
  • 10. Imperialism, Ireland and personal finance
  • 11. The 'Fifth Wheel' returns to the Admiralty
  • 12. Foreign affairs, Boers and retirement
  • 13. 'Joe' again 1900-1907.

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