George Brown, Baron George-Brown

Politician

Birthday September 2, 1914

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Lambeth, London, England

DEATH DATE 1985-6-2, Truro, Cornwall, England (70 years old)

Nationality London, England

#53970 Most Popular

1914

George Alfred George-Brown, Baron George-Brown of Jevington, (Brown; 2 September 1914 – 2 June 1985), was a British Labour Party politician who served as Deputy Leader of the Labour Party from 1960 to 1970 and held several Cabinet roles under Prime Minister Harold Wilson, including Foreign Secretary and First Secretary of State.

After leaving school at the age of 15, Brown began work as a clerk, before joining the Transport and General Workers' Union.

1922

Brown had already adopted his parents' left-wing views and later claimed to have delivered leaflets for the Labour Party in the 1922 general election when he was eight years old.

The school wanted Brown to stay on beyond the age of 15, but he decided to leave to earn his living and help his parents financially.

He started work as a junior clerk in the ledger department of a City firm, but was made redundant after pressing his fellow clerks to join a trade union.

1932

From 1932, he worked as a fur salesman for the John Lewis Partnership, dropping his Cockney accent to appeal to society customers.

Brown earned a great deal on commission.

During this time, Brown continued his education through London County Council evening schools and the Workers' Educational Association.

The poverty of his upbringing led Brown in later life to resent those who had a more privileged background and a university education.

1937

Shortly after his marriage on 27 April 1937 to Sophie Levene, daughter of Solomon Levene, a bookbinder, Brown was employed as a ledger clerk with the Transport and General Workers Union, and appointed District Organiser for Watford the next year.

By now Brown was active within the Labour Party and the Labour League of Youth.

He ran as a moderate candidate for the Chairmanship but at the 1937 Labour Party conference he was defeated by a left-wing candidate, Ted Willis, later a writer for television.

1939

At the 1939 Party conference Brown made his mark by a strong speech demanding the expulsion of Stafford Cripps for his advocacy of a Popular Front.

For the rest of Cripps' life he refused to speak to Brown.

After the outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939, Brown volunteered for the Royal Air Force but Ernest Bevin, the Minister of Labour, kept Brown and other trade union officials in their civilian jobs.

Bevin was one of the Labour leaders brought into the wartime coalition government.

1940

Brown himself served as a temporary civil servant in the Ministry of Agriculture from 1940 onwards.

As a TGWU official, Brown was an attractive candidate to Labour constituencies seeking a candidate, as the TGWU would sponsor him and pay election expenses.

He was selected for Belper, a mixed constituency near Derby which was one of Labour's principal target seats.

1945

He rose quickly through the union ranks as an organiser, and shortly before the 1945 election he was chosen as the Labour Party candidate for the seat of Belper.

In the 1945 general election, Brown gained the seat from the Conservatives with a majority of 8,881.

He was invited as one of a dozen "Young Victors" to a private dinner given by Hugh Dalton on 30 July 1945, who was talent spotting and networking.

Brown was immediately chosen to be a Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) by George Isaacs, who had followed the promoted Bevin as Minister of Labour, but his time with Isaacs was brief.

Brown was both adept at understanding political issues and how to communicate them, and convivial and generally popular within the Parliamentary Labour Party (save among the left-wing faction, whom he attacked as "long-haired intellectuals").

1951

He briefly served in the Attlee government as Minister of Works in 1951.

After Labour lost office he was appointed to the Shadow Cabinet, and came to be regarded as a leader of the trade-union-supporting faction on the right of the Labour Party.

1960

Following the sudden death of Aneurin Bevan in 1960, Brown was successful in the election to replace him as Deputy Leader of the Labour Party.

Three years later, following the sudden death of Hugh Gaitskell, Brown became Acting Leader of the Labour Party, and consequently was briefly Leader of the Opposition.

He stood in the election to gain the role permanently, but was beaten by Harold Wilson; one factor in his defeat was concern from colleagues about the impact of his well-known alcoholism, an affliction that remained with him through his life.

1964

Following Labour's victory at the 1964 election, Wilson appointed Brown as First Secretary of State, making him the second-most senior member of the Cabinet, and appointed him to the new position of Secretary of State for Economic Affairs, in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to curtail the power of the Treasury.

1966

Two months after Labour's landslide victory at the snap 1966 election, Wilson moved Brown to the role of Foreign Secretary, a job he had always coveted.

1968

Despite this, Brown continued to struggle with his alcoholism, and after several arguments with Wilson in 1968, the two agreed that Brown would resign.

1970

He defeated the Conservative incumbent and went on to hold the seat until his own defeat at the 1970 election.

Brown lost his seat of Belper in 1970, and shortly thereafter was elevated to the House of Lords; he insisted, having always been known simply as "George Brown", that upon taking his peerage in November 1970 he would combine his first name and surname to create his title, Baron George-Brown, of Jevington in the County of Sussex.

Brown was the eldest of four children born to George Brown and Rosina Harriett (née Mason), at Flat 22, I Block, Peabody Buildings, Duke Street, Lambeth, in the flat of his maternal grandmother, Ann Martha Mason, widow of a Scottish asphalter; the flat was in a working-class housing estate built by the Peabody Trust, a housing charity.

Soon after the birth, his family left and moved to the Peabody Trust block at Peabody Square, Blackfriars Road, Southwark, near Waterloo station.

His father, of a family long settled in The Borough, but who believed themselves to have Irish origins, had worked in his earlier years as a grocer's packer, then as a lorry and van driver (for Lyons, later for the Evening Standard), and served in the First World War as a chauffeur to senior British Army officers; he later became a fur salesman.

A staunch trade unionist, he eventually served as a member of the executive council of the Transport and General Workers' Union, and was later employed as a full-time official.

Aspersions were thus cast on his son's "working-class credentials" in light of what were perceived to be (however inaccurately given his English, Scottish and Irish forebears) his "East End commercial middle-class Jewish" roots.

Brown attended Gray Street Elementary School in Blackfriars, where he did well enough to pass an entrance examination to the West Square Central School, a junior grammar school and now part of a conservation area.