Event location:
Liberal History Events are about 1414800000 Kings College, London – Room K2.40, Strand Campus
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Liberal History Events events are about 1414800000 Kings College, London – Room K2.40, Strand Campus
A one-day conference organised by the Journal of Liberal History and Kings College, London.
In this year, 100 years since the coming of war in August 1914, the conflict is remembered chiefly for its impact on the millions of ordinary men, women and children who were to suffer and die and over the following four years. Lives were altered forever and society transformed. But the war had political consequences too: empires fell, new nations emerged and British political parties and the party system underwent profound change, a transformation which plunged the Liberal Party into civil war and caused it to plummet from a natural party of government to electoral insignificance within a few short years. This conference will examine some of the key issues and personalities of the period.
Agenda:
09.30 Registration
09.50 Introduction: Lord Wallace of Saltaire, President of the Liberal Democrat History Group
10.00 The Liberal Party and the First World War an overview: Professor Pat Thane, Kings College
10.30 Sir Edward Grey and the road to war: Professor Thomas Otte, University of East Anglia
11.15 Coffee break
11.45 Gilbert Murray v. E.D. Morel: Liberalism’s debilitating Great War divide: Professor Martin Ceadel, New College, Oxford
12.30 Lunch break
13.15 The papers of Asquith and Harcourt: Mike Webb, Bodleian Library
14.00 Asquith as War Premier and Liberal Leader: Dr Roland Quinault, Institute of Historical Research
14.45 Coffee break
15.15 Comparing Lloyd George and Winston Churchill as war leaders: Professor Richard Toye, University of Exeter
16.00 Panel discussion on the impact of the war on the Liberal Party:
Michael Steed, Professor Vernon Bogdanor, Roland Quinault, Pat Thane
17.00 Close of conference