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A Note on Lloyd George's Speech at the Mansion House, 21 July 1911

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Richard A. Cosgrove
Affiliation:
University of Arizona

Abstract

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Type
Communication
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1969

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References

1 Taylor, A.J.P., The Struggle for Mastery in Europe 1848–1018 (Oxford, 1954), p. 471.Google Scholar

2 Seaman, L.C.B., Post-Victorian Britain 1902–1918 (London, 1966), p. 54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 It has been surveyed from the German side by Mortimer, Joanne Stafford, ‘Commercial Interests and German Diplomacy in the Agadir Crisis’, Historical Journal, x (1967), 440–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 Tyrrell to Hardinge, 13 July 1911, Hardinge MSS. XCII, no. 123. By permission of Cambridge University Library.

5 Daeschner to de Selves, 18 July 1911, Documents Diplomatiques Français, 2nd ser. xiv no. 76.

6 B.D. VII, no. 409.

7 Italics in the original. Bertie to Crowe, 21 July 1911, Bertie MSS. Series A, F.O. 800/171.

8 Nicolson to Goschen, 24 July 1911, Nicolson MSS., vol. in for 1911. Most of this letter was quoted by Nicolson, Harold in the life of his father, Portrait of a Diplomatist (New York, 1930). P. 255– However, this revealing sentence was not included.Google Scholar

9 Jules Cambon to de Selves, 24 July 1911, D.D.F. 2nd ser. xiv, no. 98.

10 Nicolson to Grey, 26 July 1911, Grey MSS, F.O. 800/93.

11 Tyrrell to Spring Rice, 1 August 1911, Spring Rice MSS. F.O. 800/241. I am indebted to Dr Zara Steiner of New Hall, Cambridge for this reference.

12 For TyrreU’s point of view see Zara Steiner, ‘Grey, , Hardinge and the Foreign Office, 1906–1910’, Historical Journal, x (1967), 438.Google Scholar

13 Nicolson to Hardinge, 17 August 1911, Hardinge MSS. XCII, no. 149.

14 For this meeting see, inter alia, Marder, Arthur J., From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow (London, 1961), 1, 389–93.Google Scholar

15 Nicolson to Bertie, 30 August 1911, Bertie MSS. Series A, F.O. 800/171.

16 Esher, Viscount, Journals and Letters, Brett, M.V. and Oliver, , Esher, Viscount, eds. (London, 19341938), III, 61.Google Scholar

17 Esher, Journals and Letters, III, 58.

18 Nicolson, Portrait of a Diplomatist, pp. 252–3.

19 Paul Cambon to de Selves, 6 September 1911 (received in Paris, September 10), D.D.F. 2nd ser. xiv, no. 273.

20 Nicolson to Goschen, 12 September 1911, Nicolson MSS. vol. IV for 1911. In the British Documents, Gooch and Temperley reproduced Nicolson’s letter of the same date to Buchanan in St Petersburg. In it was the sentence ‘ Our military experts are of opinion that the French army has never been better organised or in a fitter state to undertake a campaign, but at the same time, I cannot imagine that war will break out.’ B.D. vn, no. 546. This is one of the rare instances I have found where the editors printed the more innocuous of two letters available to them.

21 Hankey, Lord, The Supreme Command 1914–1918 (London, 1961), 1, 149.Google Scholar

22 George, David Lloyd, War Memoirs of David Lloyd George (Boston, 19331937), 1 41Google Scholar