Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- 1 The making of a diplomat, 1863–1903
- 2 Crete: consulship and civil war, 1903–1906
- 3 Washington: Imperial affairs and arbitration, 1906–1908
- 4 Budapest and Berne: prelude to the Great War, 1908–1913
- 5 Stockholm: war and diplomacy in neutral northern Europe, 1913–1916
- 6 Stockholm: diplomacy and war in neutral northern Europe, 1916–1918
- 7 Paris: Poland, the Baltic States, and the Treaty of Versailles, 1918–1919
- 8 Madrid: Anglo-Spanish relations, 1919–1924
- 9 Washington redux: rebuilding good relations, 1924–1927
- 10 Washington redux: meeting the American challenge, 1927-1930
- Epilogue and conclusion ‘A great ambassador’
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - Paris: Poland, the Baltic States, and the Treaty of Versailles, 1918–1919
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- 1 The making of a diplomat, 1863–1903
- 2 Crete: consulship and civil war, 1903–1906
- 3 Washington: Imperial affairs and arbitration, 1906–1908
- 4 Budapest and Berne: prelude to the Great War, 1908–1913
- 5 Stockholm: war and diplomacy in neutral northern Europe, 1913–1916
- 6 Stockholm: diplomacy and war in neutral northern Europe, 1916–1918
- 7 Paris: Poland, the Baltic States, and the Treaty of Versailles, 1918–1919
- 8 Madrid: Anglo-Spanish relations, 1919–1924
- 9 Washington redux: rebuilding good relations, 1924–1927
- 10 Washington redux: meeting the American challenge, 1927-1930
- Epilogue and conclusion ‘A great ambassador’
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Lloyd George evidently does not want to see me. So I am writing him a long letter on Poland. It is all I can do & when I have done that I shall shut up.
Howard, April 1919After two weeks in the Cumberland countryside, hiking with his sons, seeing the families of his brothers and sisters, and taking part in several grouse and snipe shoots, Howard travelled with Isa and the children to spend a few days at London before the four oldest boys began their term at Downside. At the capital, the family went to the theatre, visited the zoo, and took tea with a number of relatives and friends. On 23 September, as Howard had never been to Downside, he and Isa accompanied Esme, Francis, Edmund, and Hubert there, spending two days seeing the school, meeting the head master, and finding out at first hand about the curriculum and religious instruction. Howard and his wife planned to travel to Italy – they could not embark until 18 October – and in the three weeks before leaving, he met with the king, and discussed Swedish and northern European affairs at the Foreign Office with Curzon, Tyrrell, Cecil, and others. He also travelled to Penshurst to talk matters over with Hardinge, then laid up with a broken leg. He conferred with British trade officials and Swedish commercial representatives about encouraging postwar Anglo-Swedish trade.
- Type
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- Information
- Esme HowardA Diplomatic Biography, pp. 197 - 233Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989