Robert Anthony Eden, 1st Earl of Avon, KG, MC, PC (June 12, 1897– January 14, 1977), British politician, was Foreign Secretary during World War II and Prime Minister of the United Kingdom during the 1950s. He is remembered mainly for his role in the politically disastrous Suez Crisis of 1956. In a 2004 poll of 139 political science academics organised by MORI, Eden was voted the least successful British Prime Minister of the 20th Century. This echoed the outcome of an earlier survey by BBC Radio's The Westminster Hour, ranking the British Prime Ministers of the 20th Century. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/575219.stm
Eden became Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Foreign Office in 1926. In 1931 he was promoted to Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs. In 1934 he was appointed Lord Privy Seal and Minister for the League of Nations in Stanley Baldwin's Government. Like many of his generation who had served in the First World War, Eden was strongly anti-war and strove to work through the League of Nations to preserve European peace. He was however among the first to recognise that peace could not be maintained by appeasement of Nazi Germany and fascist Italy. He privately opposed the policy of the Foreign Secretary, Sir Samuel Hoare, of trying to appease Italy during its invasion of Abyssinia (Ethiopia) in 1935. When Hoare resigned after the failure of the Hoare-Laval Pact, Eden succeeded him as Foreign Secretary.
At this stage in his career Eden was considered as something of a leader of fashion. He regularly wore a Homburg hat (similar to a bowler hat but with an upturned brim), which became forever known in Britain by his name.
He had an elder brother called Timothy and a younger brother, Nicholas, who had been killed when the HMS Indefatigable had been sunk at the Battle of Jutland in 1916.
In September 1939, on the outbreak of war, Eden returned to Chamberlain's government as Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs, but was not in the War Cabinet. As a result he was not considered a candidate for the Premiership when Chamberlain resigned after Germany invaded France in May 1940 and Churchill became Prime Minister. ( The history of development of Port Hope Simpson during Eden's time spanned the gulf between a small, isolated community on the coast of Labrador, named after Sir John Hope Simpson, Commissioner of Natural Resources and Acting-Commissioner of Justice 1934-36 and the Commission of Government.)*. Churchill appointed Eden Secretary of State for War. Later in 1940 he returned to the Foreign Office, and in this role became a member of the executive committee of the Political Warfare Executive in 1941. Although he was one of Churchill's closest confidents, his role in wartime was restricted because Churchill conducted the most important negotiations, with Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin, himself, but Eden served loyally as Churchill's lieutenant. Nevertheless he was in charge of handling much of the relations between Britain and de Gaulle during the last years of the war. In 1942 he was given the additional job of Leader of the House of Commons.
After the Labour Party won the 1945 elections, Eden went into opposition as Deputy Leader of the Conservative Party. Many felt that Churchill should have retired and allowed Eden to become party leader, but Churchill refused to consider this and Eden was too loyal to press him. He was in any case depressed during this period by the break-up of his first marriage and the death of his eldest son, Simon Eden, in the last days of the war.
In 1951, the Conservatives returned to office and Eden became Foreign Secretary for a third time. Churchill was largely a figurehead in this government and Eden had effective control of British foreign policy for the first time, as the Cold War grew more intense. He dealt effectively with the various crises of the period, although Britain was no longer the world power it had been before the war. In 1950 he and Beatrice Eden were finally divorced and in 1952 he married Churchill's niece, Lady Clarissa Spencer-Churchill (b. 1920) -- a nominal Roman Catholic who was fiercely criticized by Catholic writer Evelyn Waugh for marrying a divorced man -- a marriage much more successful than his first had been. In 1953 Eden underwent a series of operations at Boston's Lahey Clinic to correct a minor gall bladder complaint. Unfortunately Eden's health never fully recovered; this was to undermine his subsequent career. In 1954 he was made a Knight of the Garter.
This alliance proved illusory, however, when in 1956 Sir Anthony, in conjunction with France, tried to prevent Gamal Abdel Nasser, President of Egypt, from nationalising the Suez Canal, which had been owned since the 19th century by British and French shareholders in the Suez Canal Company. Sir Anthony, drawing on his experience in the 1930s, saw Nasser as another Mussolini. Sir Anthony considered the two men aggressive nationalist socialists determined to invade other countries. Others believed that Nasser was acting from legitimate patriotic concerns.
In October 1956, after months of negotiation and attempts at mediation had failed to dissuade Nasser, Britain and France, in conjunction with Israel, invaded Egypt and occupied the Suez Canal Zone. But Eisenhower immediately and strongly opposed the invasion. The U.S. President was an advocate of decolonisation, because it would liberate colonies, strengthen U.S. interests, and presumably make other Arab and African leaders more sympathetic to the United States. Eden had ignored Britain's financial dependence on the U.S. in the wake of World War II, and was forced to bow to American pressure to withdraw. The Suez Crisis is widely taken as marking the end of Britain (along with France) as a World power.
The Suez fiasco ruined Sir Anthony's reputation for statesmanship and led to a breakdown in his health. His Chancellor, Harold Macmillan, despite having been one of the architects of Suez, manoeuvred Eden into resignation and succeeded him as Prime Minister in January 1957. Eden retained his personal popularity and was made Earl of Avon in 1961.
On a trip to the United States in 1977 his health rapidly deteriorated. At his request, James Callaghan sent the RAF to fly him home to die. The Earl of Avon died from liver cancer in Salisbury in 1977 at the age of 79.
From 1945-1973, Eden was Chancellor of the University of Birmingham, England.
Eden's surviving son, Nicholas Eden (1930-1985), known as Viscount Eden until 1977, was also a politician and was a minister in the Thatcher government until his premature death from AIDS at the age of 54.
His eldest son, Simon Eden, died whilst on operational duty with the RAF in Burma during the Second World War. There was a close bond between Anthony Eden and Simon, and Simon's death was a great personal shock to Anthony Eden.
The Papers of Eden are housed at the University of Birmingham Special Collections.
Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom | Deputy Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom | Leaders of the British Conservative Party | Secretaries of State for Foreign Affairs | British Secretaries of State | Lords Privy Seal | World War II political leaders | British World War II people | Conservative MPs (UK) | Members of the United Kingdom Parliament from English constituencies | Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom | British Army officers | University of Birmingham people | Former students of Christ Church, Oxford | Knights of the Garter | Old Etonians | Earls in the Peerage of the United Kingdom | Cancer deaths | Deaths by liver cancer | 1897 births | 1977 deaths
Anthony Eden | Anthony Eden | Anthony Eden | Anthony Eden | Anthony Eden | אנתוני אידן | Anthony Eden | アンソニー・イーデン | Anthony Eden | Anthony Eden | Anthony Eden | Anthony Eden | Anthony Eden | سر اینتھنی ایڈن | 安東尼·艾登
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