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Why Do the People Hate Me So? Why Do the People Hate Me So?

Jeremy Dobson

  • Biography/Autobiography

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Why I wrote this book

The abore headino is apt. Another publisher, after reading the prologue said ‘It’s obviously a subject that you feel passionate about’, that had apparently come through in the writing. The incentive goes back a long way. About half a dozen years after the death of Sir Winston Churchill, my mother was reading an article in the Sunday Times, then declaimed ‘Churchill wasn’t right about everything.’ The article had been about the celebrated clash between Churchill and Baldwin over Indian independence. Mother was firmly of the fact that the latter had been in the right. It wasn’t until I had left industry more than twenty years later hat I was able to commence a serious study of the inter-war period, and in particular Stanley Baldwin’s role on it. That eventually resulted in this biography. The official biography by G.M Touno presented its subject, according to A.J.P. Taylor. I have tried to concentrate on what the country owed to him, and why he later came to be blamed for so many of the ‘thirties’ ills. There has already been ‘local’ (i.e. North Worcestershire) interest in this new book, which I hope can be made to appeal to a wider readership.

 

This book will also be availble as a £25.00 hardback. ISBN 9781848762480

Synopsis

The era over which Stanley Baldwin presided became known as the ‘Baldwin Age’. Yet, despite a dozen or so biographies and several portraits in the memoirs of the great and the good, he remains little remembered today. Nonetheless the country owes much to him. After the Great War of 1914–1918 the world changed, robbed of its order, structure and beliefs, and dictators came soon enough to replace the toppled monarchs. The slump that then followed the 1929 Wall Street crash ended the fragile peace of the twenties. To a backdrop of violent social unrest, Adolph Hitler came to power in Germany in January 1933. No country, not even Britain, was immune from despotic regimes as liberal capitalism and parliamentary democracy seemed to fail. That the new caesars did not flourish is owed, at least in part, to Baldwin’s personality and Christian beliefs. As national leader he propounded the role of religion with regard to everyday life, alongside the counter attractions of nationalism. Memories of the Great War were never far away; hardly a village remained that had not lost a son and the nation dreaded another war. Baldwin himself had an abhorrence of aerial bombardment and sought the abolition of the bomber. Nonetheless it was to him that the task fell of reconciling a deeply pacifist country to the new dangers in the world and of commencing a new rearmament programme. His personal role in this is here given extensive coverage. Baldwin remained at heart a countryman, and the emergence of ‘green’ issues has given to his pastorals a renewed relevance. On defence issues though, he was to be damned by Winston Churchill and others for dereliction of duty and hoodwinking the electorate. This new biography aims to refute such accusations.

About the Author

Former racing driver in Cooper-Cosworth (F.3). Ironic since Baldwin abhorred speed! Spent 30 years as a technical writer in Automotive Industry (British Leyland Han Lucas Industries). Included MGB V8 car (BL heritage series).

Book info

Genres
Format

Paperback
434 pages pages

Author

Jeremy Dobson

Publisher

Matador

Publication date

4th January 2010

ISBN

9781848762398