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1963 - 1964 |
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| Alex
Douglas-Home |
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b-July 2, 1903, London, England
d-Oct.9, 1995, The Hirsel, Coldstream, Berwickshire, Scotland
As Lord Dunglass, the courtesy title he held until he succeeded in 1951 to
the earldom of Home, he sat in the House of Commons as a Unionist (1931-45,
1950-51). He served as parliamentary private secretary to Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain (1937-39), undersecretary of state for foreign affairs in
.Winston
Churchill's "caretaker" government (May-July 1945), minister of state for
Scotland (1951-55), secretary of state for Commonwealth relations (1955-60),
deputy leader (1956-57) and leader (1957-60) of the House of Lords, and lord
president of the council (1957-60) before his first term as foreign secretary.
In October 1963 he disclaimed his peerages for life, took the name Sir Alec
Douglas-Home, and succeeded
Harold
Macmillan as prime minister during a Conservative Party crisis, the most
spectacular feature of which was an adultery scandal involving John Dennis
Profumo, secretary of state for war from 1960 to 1963.
Admittedly having slight knowledge of economics, Sir Alec as prime minister
was unable to improve the deteriorating British balance-of-payments situation.
He antagonized numerous Conservatives by inducing the House of Commons to pass
legislation against price-fixing. Both as foreign secretary and as prime
minister, he gained U.S. approval for his firm anti-Communism. As chairman of
the Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference (July 1964), he achieved some
compromise between extremist views on racial problems. Throughout his ministry
he was faced with the prospect of a forthcoming general election, which took
place on Oct. 15, 1964, and brought a Conservative defeat. He was succeeded
(July 1965) as party leader by the future prime minister
Edward Heath.
In December 1974 he was created a life peer, Baron Home of the Hirsel of
Coldstream. In 1976 he published his autobiography, The Way the Wind Blows. He
also published Border Reflections: Chiefly on the Arts of Shooting and Fishing
(1979) and Letters to a Grandson (1983).
Lord Home's papers are, at the time of writing, still held in private
possession, although his correspondence can be found in other collections. For
example, the National Library of Scotland holds
Home's correspondence with Lord and Lady Tweedsmuir, while
Birmingham University
holds his letters to Lord Avon.