Beaverbrook
Surname | Aitken |
Given Name | Maxwell |
Born | 25 May 1879 |
Died | 9 Jun 1964 |
Country | United Kingdom, Canada |
Category | Government |
Gender | Male |
Contributor: Alan Chanter
ww2dbaseWilliam Maxwell Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook was born in Maple, Ontario, Canada in 1879. He became a stockbroker where he a made a fortune from the Canadian cement mills. In 1909 Aitken moved to Britain and the followed year was elected as the Conservative Member of Parliament for Ashton-under-Lyne. In 1912, he sold a large sum of Canadian stocks, and some claimed the trades might have irregularities; he was never accused of securities fraud in Canada. In 1918 Aitken was granted the title of Lord Beaverbrook on his appointment by David Lloyd George to the post of Minister of Information.
ww2dbaseIn 1919 Beaverbrook obtained a majority interest in the Daily Express newspaper, and in 1921 founded its companion newspaper, The Sunday Express. In 1929 Lord Beaverbrook acquired the London Evening Standard making him one of the most influential press Barons in Britain. In the same year he began his campaign for "Empire Free Trade".
ww2dbaseIn May 1940 Winston Churchill recruited Beaverbrook into his Cabinet as the Minister for Aircraft Production (1940-41). The taciturn Lord Beaverbrook ran his Ministry in the same way that he had ran his newspaper empire, and in so doing gathered a large number of political enemies, particularly in the Air Ministry, whose responsibility for deciding which Aircraft the Royal Air Force were to have he immediately usurped. Nevertheless through his efforts the RAF were able to receive a constant supply of new fighters when they were needed the most-During the Battle of Britain. "His personal force and genius made this Aitken's finest hour", said Churchill after observing Aitken's successes at the Air Ministry.
ww2dbaseIn 1941 Churchill appointed Beaverbrook as Minister of Supply, and a year later to the newly created post of Minister of War Production. At a dinner in New York in 1942 he was instrumental in encouraging the Americans to supply aid to the Soviet Union. Beaverbrook also opposed, unsuccessfully, to the policy of strategic bombing of German cities, feeling that bombers would be better employed in supporting the ground troops.
ww2dbaseFrom 1943 until 1945 he served as Lord Privy Seal, a post that held no Ministerial responsibilities but was traditionally one of the Great Offices of State in the United Kingdom. In reality, he was a Minister without Portfolio.
ww2dbaseAfter the War Beaverbrook's political career came to an end. Once the protective hand of Churchill's friendship had evaporated, Beaverbrook was left with no wide popularity in Parliament and few friends amongst the new regime of eager young socialists and trade unionists of the Attlee premiership. He left Parliament under the excuse of ill-health (a common reason given for the removal of Ministers who were no longer politically desirable).
ww2dbaseWilliam Maxwell Aitken, 1st Lord Beaverbrook, died in Surrey, England, Britain in 1964.
ww2dbaseSources: Bomber Command (Max Hastings, Pan book 1979), Fighter (Len Deighton, Triat/Pamther, 1979), Wartime Britain 1939-1945 (Juliet Gardiner, Headline books 2004), The Wordsworth Dictionary of British History (Wordsworth Editions, 1994).
Last Major Revision: Sep 2007
Beaverbrook Timeline
25 May 1879 | Maxwell Aitken was born. |
26 Apr 1940 | In Britain, Lord Beaverbrook's Daily Express published an editorial condemning the stirring up of witch hunts against foreign nationals falsely suspected of being members of a Fifth column. |
11 May 1940 | Winston Churchill named Lord Beaverbrook the head of the Ministry of Aircraft Production. This ministry reported to the War Cabinet, and was responsible for setting aircraft production priorities. |
19 Jun 1940 | Lord Beaverbrook, the Minster of Aircraft Production, announced that British aircraft production had since 10 May 1940 exceeded losses from all causes. |
11 Jul 1940 | British Minister for Aircraft Production Lord Beaverbrook announced that there would be virtually no limit to expenditures on US aircraft, with costs working out to over £2 million per day on planes for the RAF. |
2 Aug 1940 | Lord Beaverbrook was appointed to the British War Cabinet. |
9 Jun 1964 | Maxwell Aitken passed away. |
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Visitor Submitted Comments
26 Sep 2018 05:53:34 AM
To Anonymous of 25 Sep 2018: If I recall correctly, Lady Astor gave him that nickname. It was largely due to Beaverbrook's tendencies to always think in business - and profit - terms. That led to folks not necessarily always trusting him, as one could not determine whether a particular suggestion of his was motivated by the common end goal or by his personal profit.
All visitor submitted comments are opinions of those making the submissions and do not reflect views of WW2DB.
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25 Sep 2018 10:51:08 AM
Why was lord Beaverbrook called Lord been-a-crook