Sir Charles Wentworth Dilke, 2nd Baronet,
PC (4 September 1843 – 26 January 1911) was an English
Liberal and Radical politician. A
republican in the early 1870s, he later became a leader in the radical challenge to Whig control of the Liberal Party, making a number of important contributions, including the legislation increasing democracy in 1883–1885, his support of the growing labour and feminist movements and his prolific writings on international affairs.
Touted as a future prime minister, his aspirations to higher political office were effectively terminated in 1885 after a notorious and well-publicised divorce case.
His disgrace and the alignment of
Joseph Chamberlain with the Conservatives both greatly weakened the radical cause.
Background and education
Dilke was the son of
Sir Charles Dilke, 1st Baronet. Born in
Chelsea in 1843, he was educated at
Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where he was President of the
Cambridge Union Society. His second wife was the author, art historian, feminist and trade unionist
Emily Francis Pattison, née Strong (widow of Rev.
Mark Pattison), subsequently known as Lady Dilke.
Despite being a radical, Dilke was also an imperialist; he argued for British imperial domination in his bestselling 1868 book, ''Greater Britain''.
[Thomas M. Costa, "Dilke, Charles Wentworth" in ''Historical Dictionary of the British Empire'' edited by James S. Olson and Robert Shadle. Greenwood Press, 1996 ]
Political career, 1868–1886
Dilke became
Liberal Member of Parliament for
Chelsea in 1868, which he held until 1886.
In 1871, Dilke caused controversy when he criticised the
British monarchy and argued that the United Kingdom should adopt a
republican form of government; public criticism made Dilke recant that.
He was
Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs from 1880 to 1882, during Gladstone's second government, and was admitted to the
Privy Council
A privy council is a body that advises the head of state of a state, typically, but not always, in the context of a monarchic government. The word "privy" means "private" or "secret"; thus, a privy council was originally a committee of the mon ...
in 1882. In December of that year, he entered the cabinet as
President of the Local Government Board, serving until 1885. A leading and determined radical within the party, he negotiated the passage of the
Third Reform Act, which the Conservatives allowed through the House of Lords, in return for a
redistribution that they calculated to be marginally favourable to themselves. (The granting of the vote to agricultural labourers threatened Conservative dominance of rural seats, but many double-member seats were abolished, with seats redistributed to suburbia, where Conservative support was growing.) He also supported laws giving the municipal
franchise to women, legalising labour unions, improving working conditions and limiting working hours, as well as being one of the earliest campaigners for universal schooling.
Crawford scandal
Dilke's younger brother,
Ashton Wentworth Dilke
Ashton Wentworth Dilke (11 August 1850 – 12 March 1883) was an editor, British traveller and radical Liberal politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1880 to 1883.
Life
Dilke was the younger son of Sir Charles Dilke, 1st Baronet, and w ...
, married
Margaret "Maye" Eustace Smith, the eldest daughter of Liberal politician and shipowner
Thomas Eustace Smith and his wife, Ellen, in 1876.
Charles Dilke was said to have become the lover of Ellen Smith (his brother's mother-in-law),
[ a relationship which continued after his marriage in 1884.
In July 1885, Charles Dilke was accused of seducing Thomas Eustace Smith's daughter Virginia Crawford ( Smith), who was his brother's sister-in-law (and his actual lover's daughter), in the first year of her marriage to ]Donald Crawford
Donald Crawford KC FRSE (5 May 1837–1 January 1919) was a Scottish advocate who became a United Kingdom Liberal MP. He sat for the constituency of Lanarkshire North-East from 1885 to 1895.
Life
He was born on 3 May 1837, the son of A ...
, another MP.[ That was supposed to have occurred in 1882, when Virginia was 19, and she claimed that the affair had continued on an irregular basis for the next two and a half years.
Crawford sued for divorce, and the case was heard on 12 February 1886 before The Hon. Mr Justice Butt in the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division. Virginia Crawford was not in court, and the sole evidence was her husband's account of Virginia's confession. There were also some accounts by servants, which were both circumstantial and insubstantial. Dilke, aware of his vulnerability over the affair with Virginia's mother, refused to give evidence, largely on the advice of his confidant, Joseph Chamberlain. Butt found paradoxically that Virginia had been guilty of adultery with Dilke but that there was no admissible evidence to show that Dilke had been guilty of adultery with Virginia. He concluded, "I cannot see any case whatsoever against Sir Charles Dilke", dismissed Dilke from the suit with costs and pronounced a decree nisi dissolving the Crawfords' marriage.]
The paradoxical finding left doubts hanging over Dilke's respectability, and investigative journalist William Thomas Stead launched a public campaign against him. Two months later, in April, Dilke sought to reopen the case and clear his name by making the Queen's Proctor
Proctor (a variant of ''procurator'') is a person who takes charge of, or acts for, another.
The title is used in England and some other English-speaking countries in three principal contexts:
* In law, a proctor is a historical class of lawye ...
a party to the case and opposing the decree absolute
A decree nisi or rule nisi () is a court order that will come into force at a future date unless a particular condition is met. Unless the condition is met, the ruling becomes a decree absolute (rule absolute), and is binding. Typically, the condi ...
. Unfortunately, Dilke and his legal team had badly miscalculated (his legal advice has been described as "perhaps the worst professional advice ever given"). Though they had planned to subject Virginia to a searching cross-examination, Dilke, having been dismissed from the case, had no '' locus standi''. As a consequence, it was Dilke who was subjected to severe scrutiny in the witness box by Henry Matthews. Matthews' attack was devastating, and Dilke proved an unconvincing witness. His habit of physically cutting pieces out of his diary with scissors was held up to particular ridicule, as it created the impression that he had cut out evidence of potentially embarrassing appointments. The jury found that Virginia had presented the true version of the facts and that the decree absolute should be granted.[
Dilke was ruined. Other women claimed he had approached them for a liaison. Various lurid rumours circulated about his love life, including that he had invited a maidservant to join himself and his lover in bed and that he had introduced one or more of them to "every kind of French vice", and he became a figure of fun in bawdy music-hall songs.][Nicholls 1995, p188, 191-2]
For a time it seemed that he would be tried for perjury. The accusations had a devastating effect on his political career, leading eventually to the loss of his parliamentary seat ( Chelsea) in the 1886 UK general election
The 1886 United Kingdom general election took place from 1 to 27 July 1886, following the defeat of the Government of Ireland Bill 1886. It resulted in a major reversal of the results of the 1885 election as the Conservatives, led by Lord Sali ...
.[Jenkins (2004)]
Matthews gained public acclaim, winning the seat of Birmingham East as a Conservative at the same election. Queen Victoria, who approved of his performance in the trial, demanded his inclusion in Lord Salisbury's cabinet, and he was made Home Secretary. The Queen had asked in vain for Dilke to be stripped of his membership of the Privy Council.
Dilke spent much of the remainder of his life and much of his fortune trying to exonerate himself, which adds weight to the view that Virginia lied about the identity of her lover. Over the years, it has been suggested that his political colleagues, including Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery, and Chamberlain himself, may have inspired her to accuse him, seeing him as an obstacle to their own ambitions. Dilke was largely exonerated by an inquiry in the early 1890s, which cast doubt on the truthfulness of Virginia's evidence. Her description of their alleged love nest in Warren Street
Warren Street is a street in the London Borough of Camden that runs from Cleveland Street in the west to Tottenham Court Road in the east. Warren Street tube station is located at the eastern end of the street.
History
The street is crossed b ...
was full of inaccuracies and it has been speculated that she may have been attempting to distract attention from an earlier affair with one Captain Forster.
Political career after 1886 and death
Dilke lost his Chelsea parliamentary seat at the 1886 general election. In 1889, he was approached by the Forest of Dean Liberal Association to stand as its parliamentary candidate since his radical credentials suited the mining constituency seeking employment law reform. Hoping that he could be rehabilitated as a front-line politician, Dilke consulted Liberal leader Gladstone, who discouraged him and so Dilke did not pursue the offer. Three years later, however, Dilke accepted the invitation, against Gladstone's wishes and, at the 1892 general election, was duly elected as the MP for the Forest of Dean, which he held for the remainder of his life.
He hoped to be appointed Secretary of State for War in the Liberal Government formed in 1905, but it was not to be. Dilke attributed his exclusion to the incoming Prime Minister Henry Campbell-Bannerman's lingering resentment towards Dilke for his role in the 1895 "cordite vote
The vote of no confidence in the Rosebery ministry of 21 June 1895, also known as the Cordite vote, was the occasion on which the Liberal Party (UK), Liberal Government of the Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery, Earl of Rosebery was defeated ...
", which had brought about the end of Lord Rosebery's administration.
Dilke died in 1911 at 76 Sloane Street, Chelsea; the same house in which he was born. He was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium and his ashes buried at Kensal Green Cemetery.
In popular culture
Following his death in 1911, fundraising commenced to establish a local community hospital in his Forest of Dean constituency. The Dilke Memorial Hospital, Cinderford, was built in 1922 and still exists as a permanent memorial to the popular MP.
Interest in Dilke was revived by ''Dilke: A Victorian tragedy'' a 1958 non-fiction work by the Labour Party politician Roy Jenkins
Roy Harris Jenkins, Baron Jenkins of Hillhead, (11 November 1920 – 5 January 2003) was a British politician who served as President of the European Commission from 1977 to 1981. At various times a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Lab ...
. A 1964 West End play ''The Right Honourable Gentleman
''The Right Honourable Gentleman'' is a 1962 play by Michael Dyne, first staged in 1964.
Plot
''The Right Honourable Gentleman'' is a dramatization of the rather complicated real-life Crawford scandal of Victorian England. Sir Charles Dilke, a ...
'' by Michael Dyne
Michael Bradley Dyne (August 19, 1918 – May 17, 1989) was a British-American television and film screenwriter. He was also an actor, and wrote one stage play.
Dyne was the son of sculptor Musgrave Bradley Dyne. He was born in London, educated i ...
covers the scandal that brought Dilke down.
Dilke is portrayed by Richard Leech in an episode of the 1975 ATV
ATV may refer to:
Broadcasting
* Amateur television
*Analog television
Television stations and companies
* Ràdio i Televisió d'Andorra
* ATV (Armenia)
* ATV (Aruba), NBC affiliate
* ATV (Australian TV station), Melbourne
* ATV (Austria)
* AT ...
series Edward the Seventh.
In the 1994 film ''Sirens'', detailing sexual licence in Australia in the 1930s, the local pub is called the "Sir Charles Dilke".
Arms
References
Sources
*Chamberlain, M. E.
Muriel Evelyn Chamberlain (November 1932 - 8 February 2022) was emeritus professor of history at the University of Wales, Swansea (later called Swansea University).Cover notes. ''Decolonisation: The Fall of the European Empires''. Blackwell, Oxfor ...
"Sir Charles Dilke and the British Intervention In Egypt, 1882: decision making In a nineteenth-century cabinet." ''British Journal of International Studies'' 2#3 (1976): 231–245.
*; A denial of the scandal prepared by his niece
*; Emphasis on the scandal
*
*—
*
Primary sources
*Dilke, Charles Wentworth. (1868). ''Greater Britain''. Macmillan (reissued by Cambridge University Press, 2009; )
External links
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Blue Plaque
at 76 Sloane Street, Brompton, London
The Dilke-Crawford-Roskill Papers
held at Churchill Archives Centre
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dilke, Charles
1843 births
1911 deaths
English republicans
Baronets in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Liberal Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies
Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom
Presidents of the Cambridge Union
Alumni of Trinity Hall, Cambridge
Presidents of the Royal Statistical Society
People educated at Westminster School, London
UK MPs 1868–1874
UK MPs 1874–1880
UK MPs 1880–1885
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