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  1. Stanley Baldwin

    Stanley Baldwin

    British statesman

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  1. Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley, KG, PC, PC (Can), JP, FRS (3 August 1867 – 14 December 1947) was a British statesman and Conservative politician who dominated the government of the United Kingdom between the world wars, serving as prime minister on three occasions, from May 1923 to January 1924, from November 1924 to June 1929 ...

    • Ramsay MacDonald
    • Conservative
  2. Stanley Baldwin was a British Conservative politician, three times prime minister between 1923 and 1937; he headed the government during the General Strike of 1926, the Ethiopian crisis of 1935, and the abdication crisis of 1936. A relative of the author Rudyard Kipling and the painter Sir Edward.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Stanley Baldwin was a Conservative Prime Minister of the UK from 1923 to 1937, during the First World War and the interwar period. He led the country through the General Strike, the Locarno pact, the financial crisis and the abdication crisis. He also supported the defence of democracy and the rights of women and Jews.

  4. Learn about Stanley Baldwin, who served as prime minister three times in the 1920s and 1930s. Find out his role in the General Strike, the abdication crisis and the appeasement of Nazi Germany.

    • Finest Hour 188, Second Quarter 2020
    • Party Leader and Prime Minister
    • Contrasting Styles
    • Rearmament: Politics & Myth

    By Philip Williamson

    Philip Williamson is professor of History at Durham University and author of Stanley Baldwin: Conservative Leadership and National Values(1999) and co-editor (with Edward Baldwin) of The Baldwin Papers. A Conservative Statesman 1908–1947(2004). Stanley Baldwin (1867–1947) was one of the most successful and important political leaders of twentieth-century Britain. In October 1935, Winston Churchill described him as “a statesman who has gathered to himself a greater volume of confidence and goo...

    Baldwin was Conservative party leader for fourteen years, from 1923 to 1937, and prime minister three times: 1923–24, 1924–29, and again—after four years from 1931 as deputy prime ministerin the National government—from 1935 to 1937. Impressive as this career at the top of British politics was in duration, his greater significance is as a dominatin...

    Baldwin is not an easy politician to understand. In part this is because he left fewer private records than political leaders of similar stature. Churchill habitually conducted much of his political business by lengthy letters and memoranda, large numbers of which are preserved in government records and the papers of his colleagues. He was also ver...

    Baldwin’s and Churchill’s political careers were interlinked during the interwar years, and so, in one particular respect, were their historical reputations. Baldwin’s large part in ending the Lloyd George coalition government in 1922 contributed to an abrupt halt to Churchill’s career as a Liberal cabinet minister and his temporary loss of a parli...

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  6. Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin, (born Aug. 3, 1867, Bewdley, Worcestershire, Eng.—died Dec. 14, 1947, Astley Hall, near Stourport-on-Severn, Worcestershire), British politician. After managing his family’s large industrial holdings, he became a Conservative member of the House of Commons (1908–37).

  7. Jun 11, 2018 · views 3,745,894 updated May 23 2018. Baldwin, Stanley, 1st Earl of Bewdley (1867–1947) British Conservative statesman and prime minister (1923–24, 1924–29, 1935–37). He entered Parliament in 1908, and was chancellor of the exchequer (1922–23) before succeeding Bonar Law as prime minister.

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