Выбрать главу

academic circles in the United States, do not allow an outside observer to feel any great

optimism for the future either of the Milner Group or of the great institutions which it has

influenced. It would seem that the great idealistic adventure which began with Toynbee

and Milner in 1875 had slowly ground its way to a finish of bitterness and ashes.

Appendix—A Tentative Roster of the Milner Group

The following lists are tentative in the sense that they are incomplete and erroneous.

The errors are more likely in the attribution of persons to one circle of the Group rather

than another, and are less likely in the attribution to the Group of persons who are not

members at all. For the names given I have sufficient evidence to convince me that they

are members of the Croup, although I would not in many cases feel competent to insist

that the persons concerned knew that they were members of a secret group. The evidence

on which this list is based is derived from documentary evidence, from private

information, and from circumstantial evidence.

Persons are listed in each group on the basis of general impression rather than exact

demarcation, because the distinction between the two is rather vague and varies from

time to time. For example, I know for a fact that Sir Alfred Zimmern and Lord Cecil of

Chelwood attended meetings of the inner circle in the period before 1920, but I have

attributed them to the outer circle because this appears to be the more accurate

designation for the long period since 1920.

Within each list I have placed the names of the various individuals in order of

chronology and of importance. In some cases where I suspected a person of being a

member without having any very convincing evidence, I have enclosed the name in

brackets.

A. The Society of the Elect

Cecil John Rhodes

Nathan Rothschild, Baron Rothschild

Sir Harry Johnston

William T. Stead

Reginald Brett, Viscount Esher

Alfred Milner, Viscount Milner

B. F. Hawksley

Thomas Brassey, Lord Brassey

Edmund Garrett

[Sir Edward Cook]

Alfred Beit

Sir Abe Bailey

Albert Grey, Earl Grey

Archibald Primrose, Earl of Rosebery

Arthur James Balfour

Sir George R. Parkin

Philip Lyttelton Gell

Sir Henry Birchenough

Sir Reginald Sothern Holland

Arthur Lionel Smith

Herbert A. L. Fisher

William Waldegrave Palmer, Earl of Selborne

[Sir Alfred Lyttelton]

Sir Patrick Duncan

Robert Henry Brand, Baron Brand

Philip Kerr, Marquess of Lothian

Lionel Curtis

Geoffrey Dawson

Edward Grigg, Baron Altrincham

Jan C. Smuts

Leopold Amery

Waldorf Astor, Viscount Astor

Nancy Astor, Lady Astor

B. The Association of Helpers

1. The Inner Circle

Sir Patrick Duncan

Robert Henry Brand, Baron Brand

Philip Kerr, Marquess of Lothian

Lionel Curtis

William L. Hichens

Geoffrey Dawson

Edward Grigg, Baron Altrincham

Herbert A. L. Fisher

Leopold Amery

Richard Feetham

Hugh A. Wyndham

Sir Dougal Malcolm

Basil Williams

Basil Kellett Long

Sir Abe Bailey

Jan C. Smuts

Sir William Marris

James S. Meston

Baron Meston

Malcolm Hailey

Baron Hailey

Flora Shaw

Lady Lugard

Sir Reginald Coupland

Waldorf Astor, Viscount Astor

Nancy Astor, Lady Astor

Maurice Hankey, Baron Hankey

Arnold J. Toynbee

Laurence F. Rushbrook Williams

Henry Vincent Hodson

Vincent Todd Harlow

2. The Outer Circle

John Buchan, Baron Tweedsmuir

Sir Fabian Ware

Sir Alfred Zimmern

Gilbert Murray

Robert Cecil, Viscount Cecil of Chelwood

Sir James W. Headlam-Morley

Frederick J. N. Thesiger, Viscount Chelmsford

Sir Valentine Chirol

Edward F. L. Wood, Earl of Halifax

Sir [James] Arthur Salter

Sir Arthur H. D. R. Steel-Maitland

William G. A. Ormsby-Gore, Baron Harlech

Dame Edith Lyttelton, Mrs. Alfred Lyttelton

Frederick Lugard, Baron Lugard

Sir [Leander] Starr Jameson

Henry W. C. Davis

John A. Simon, Viscount Simon

Samuel J. G. Hoare, Viscount Templewood

Maurice P. A. Hankey, Baron Hankey

Wilson Harris

[Francis Clarke]

William G. S. Adams

[William K. Hancock]

Ernest L. Woodward

Sir Harold Butler

Kenneth N. Bell

Sir Donald B. Somervell

Sir Maurice L. Gwyer

Charles R. S. Harris

Sir Edward R. Peacock

Sir Cyril J. Radcliffe

John W. Wheeler-Bennett

Robert J. Stopford

Robert M. Barrington-Ward

[Kenneth C. Wheare]

Edward H. Carr

Malcolm MacDonald

Godfrey Elton, Baron Elton

Sir Neill Malcolm

Freeman Freeman-Thomas, Viscount Willingdon

Isaiah Berlin

Roger M. Makins

Sir Arthur Willert

Ivison S. Macadam

3. Members in other countries

a. Canada

Arthur J. Glazebrook

Sir George Parkin

Vincent Massey

George P. de T. Glazebrook

Percy Corbett [Sir Joseph Flavelle]

b. United States

George Louis Beer

Frank Aydelotte

Jerome Greene

[Clarence Steit]

c. South Africa

Jan C. Smuts

Sir Patrick Duncan

Sir Abe Bailey

Basil K. Long

Richard Feetham

[Sir James Rose-Innes]

d. Australia

Sir Thomas Bavin

Sir Frederic Eggleston

[Dudley D. Braham]

e. New Zealand

James Allen

William Downie Stewart

Arthur R. Atkinson

f. Germany

Helmuth James von Moltke

Adam von Trott zu Solz

Notes

Chapter 1

1. The sources of this information and a more detailed examination of the organization

and personnel of the Rhodes secret society will be found in Chapter 3 below.

2. On Parkin, see the biography (1929) started by Sir John Willison and finished by

Parkin's son-in-law, William L. Grant. Also see the sketches of both Parkin and Milner in

the Dictionary of National Biography. The debate in the Oxford Union which first

brought Parkin to Milner's attention is mentioned in Herbert Asquith's (Lord Oxford and

Asquith) Memories and Reflections (2 vols., Boston, 1928), 1, 26.

3. The ideas for social service work among the poor and certain other ideas held by

Toynbee and Milner were derived from the teachings of John Ruskin, who first came to

Oxford as a professor during their undergraduate days. The two young men became

ardent disciples of Ruskin and were members of his road-building group in the summer

of 1870. The standard biography of Ruskin was written by a protege of Milner's, Edward

Cook. The same man edited the complete collection of Ruskin's works in thirty-eight

volumes. See Lord Oxford and Asquith, Memories and Reflections (2 vols., Boston,

1928), 1, 48. Cook's sketch in the Dictionary of National Biography was written by

Asquith's intimate friend and biographer, J. A. Spender.

4. The quotation is from Cecil Headlam, ed., The Milner Papers (2 vols., London,

1931-1933), I, 15. There exists no biography of Milner, and all of the works concerned

with his career have been written by members of the Milner Group and conceal more

than they reveal. The most important general sketches of his life are the sketch in the