With only a slight exaggeration I can claim that my interest in the National Liberal party is as old as my interest in British politics. I have a vague recollection of the first General Election of which I was at all conscious – one in which the National Liberals were still active. Counting the results, rather in the way that I spotted trains or collected stamps, I felt that I understood the difference between Labour (‘them’) and the Conservatives (‘us’). My father helpfully explained that the Liberals, of whom there were not many, came somewhere between the other two. But the existence of a number of National Liberals, to whom the suffix ‘and Conservative’ was confusingly added, defied my comprehension. Whether any parental guidance was offered I cannot now recall but, in any case, it is likely to have passed over the head of a nine-year-old political tyro. Many years later these infant enquires were rekindled by work on a biography of Sir John Simon, the man who did more than any other to bring the party into being. And, as the majority of my historical research has been focused over the years on the fortunes of the Conservative and Liberal parties in the twentieth century, it seemed reasonable that I should now attempt to chart the history of that group which in many ways represents the intersection of these two political traditions.
In writing this book I have incurred a number of debts which it is a pleasure to acknowledge. Once again, my good friends Philip Bell and Ralph White subjected the entire work to wise and constructive scrutiny, saving me from many errors. I am grateful for the support and advice of Lester Crook, Kate Sherratt and Elizabeth Munns at I.B.Tauris. Matt Cole, Mark Egan and Gaynor Johnson have helped at various points in my research. Those who took an active part in the activities of the National Liberal party are now, sadly, a diminishing band, but for granting interviews or answering written enquires I am grateful to the late Lord Gilmour of Craigmillar, Lord Heseltine, Dr Glyn Tegai Hughes, the late Viscount Muirshiel of Kilmacolm, Sir John Nott and the late Lord Renton of Huntingdon. I owe a particular debt of gratitude for the help of the staff in the many libraries and archives in which I have worked. I hope others will not be offended if I single out the team at the Denbighshire Record Office, housed in the Old Gaol in Ruthin, not only for their invariable good humour and for introducing me to an invaluable collection of papers, but also for affording the unique opportunity of carrying out research from within a former prison cell! Peggy Rider typed the entire manuscript cheerfully, accurately and promptly; Gill Wilson and Paula Mills gave crucial help in the latter stages of gestation; and Tim Johnson, with expert advice from Matthew Brown, took the fear out of the production of camera-ready copy. To all I offer my warmest thanks without in any way seeking to transfer ownership of those errors of commission and omission which no doubt remain in the finished work, and for which the author accepts full responsibility.
For permission to quote from original material of which they own the copyright or which is in their care, the author wishes to thank the following: the Hon. Leo Amery; the Earl Baldwin of Bewdley; the Bedfordshire and Luton Archives Service; Mr Robert Bernays; the University of Birmingham and the Chamberlain family; the Bodleian Library, Oxford; Cambridgeshire Archives and Local Studies; the Master, Fellows and Scholars of Churchill College, Cambridge; Mrs Joanna Clement-Davies; the Conservative Party Archive; the Denbighshire Record Office; the Durham County Record Office and Captain J. Headlam; the Hon. Mrs Susan Fairbairn; the Flintshire Record Office; the Baron Harlech; Manchester Archives and Local Studies; Mr Vince Morris and the Vale of Clwyd Conservative Association; The National Archives; the Viscount Runciman of Doxford; Dr Tom Shakespeare; the Director of Culture, Sheffield City Council; Mr John Simon; the Hon. Margaret Simon; the Viscount Tenby; the Baron Teviot; the Viscount Thurso, MP; Walsall Local History Centre; West Yorkshire Archive Service; the Earl of Woolton. Every effort has been made to trace the owners of copyright material. If any copyright has been inadvertently transgressed, the author trusts that his apologies will be accepted.
David Dutton
Liverpool, August 2007