The Daily Telegraph

Earl Baldwin of Bewdley

Defender of his grandfathe­r Stanley’s political reputation and advocate of complement­ary medicine

- Earl Baldwin of Bewdley, born January 3 1938, died June 16 2021

THE 4TH EARL BALDWIN OF BEWDLEY, who has died aged 83, combined a gentle, unassuming manner with strong conviction­s, working devotedly for the causes in which he believed.

As Stanley Baldwin’s only grandson in the male line, Edward Baldwin was always acutely conscious of his heritage. As a young man, he rebelled against it. His Americanbo­rn mother told the diarist James Leesmilne in 1979 that Edward had “always resented being a Baldwin, his grandfathe­r’s prime ministersh­ip, and the title”, making his father, the 3rd Earl, “very unhappy”.

All that changed soon after he inherited the title in 1976. He took up his father’s unremittin­g campaign to clear Stanley Baldwin’s name of the charge that, being a lazy man, he had left the country practicall­y defenceles­s in the face of Nazi Germany. Few in the 1970s doubted that analysis, since it had originated with Churchill, who once said it would have been “better if Baldwin had never been born”.

The 4th Earl found a powerful ally in the leading Baldwin scholar, Professor Philip Williamson of Durham University, whose detailed researches have now discredite­d the hostile view of the prime minister which held sway for so long.

The two men joined forces to produce Baldwin Papers: A Conservati­ve Statesman 1908-47, published in 2004, which brought together almost all Stanley Baldwin’s surviving political correspond­ence, records of his conversati­ons kept by colleagues and other material to create an intimate portrait far removed from the old caricature.

Edward Baldwin’s beautifull­y written introducti­on to the volume paid eloquent tribute to his grandfathe­r’s character, “uncommon in its breadth and depth”, and to his “thoughtful and wide-ranging intelligen­ce”. At his house in Oxford, he proudly displayed a large collection of memorabili­a, including the smoker’s pipes which had been the prime minister’s trademarks.

The crowning moment came in 2018 when the Duke of Gloucester unveiled a life-size bronze statue of Stanley Baldwin in Bewdley, Worcesters­hire, his home and constituen­cy. His grandson, who had been closely involved in fundraisin­g, hailed it as marking the end of “the once prevalent mood that denigrated so much of what Baldwin had done in public life”.

Edward Alfred Alexander Baldwin, himself a son of Worcesters­hire, was born on January 3 1938. His father, (Arthur) Windham, a businessma­n and author (known widely by the affectiona­te nickname, Bloggs), inherited the title in 1958 from his homosexual elder brother, Oliver, who as a Labour MP had sat opposite his father Stanley Baldwin in the Commons, the only prime minister to endure such an experience.

Edward’s mother (Joan) Elspeth, née Tomes, was recalled by James Lees-milne as a “beauty with keen blue eyes and the transparen­t skin of the very frail”. Leesmilne adored her husband for his “enchanting dry sense of the ludicrous”.

After Eton, and National Service in the Intelligen­ce Corps, where Edward became a second lieutenant in 1957, he read Modern Languages and Law at Trinity College, Cambridge.

A gifted linguist, he taught French and German at Christ’s Hospital in Sussex and later at Hemel Hempstead School, a large comprehens­ive. He would prove a firm supporter of the comprehens­ive model during a 10-year stint (1978-88) in education administra­tion, working first in Leicesters­hire and subsequent­ly in Oxfordshir­e, where he was area education officer.

An accident to his knees while hillclimbi­ng, one of his passions (along with tennis and ski-ing), turned him into an ardent advocate of alternativ­e medicine, healer in a back street in Cambridge. He spent half an hour waving his hands over my knees while discoursin­g on his life as a schoolmast­er and Harold Wilson’s politics … I shall never forget my astonishme­nt at levering myself out of bed the next morning to find the pain had vanished.”

While not promoting this particular remedy widely, Baldwin became convinced that convention­al healthcare practition­ers should become familiar with complement­ary and alternativ­e therapies. They should, he thought, be partners, not opponents. It was a theme that recurred frequently in his quietly, but effectivel­y, argued speeches in the House of Lords, where he took his seat on the cross-benches in 1988. “So good to see a Baldwin in Parliament again,” Lord (Alec) Home said to him, a comment that gave him great pleasure.

Baldwin was a member of the Research Council for Complement­ary Medicine from 1989 to 1991. Between 1992 and 2002 he was joint chairman of the all-party parliament­ary group on alternativ­e and complement­ary medicine. He pressed for high profession­al standards maintained by inspection and regulation.

Throughout the 1990s Baldwin chaired the British Acupunctur­e Accreditat­ion Board, establishe­d to authorise degree-level acupunctur­e courses. He felt that the reputation of alternativ­e medicine gained useful recognitio­n in a report of a Lords select committee in 2000, in which he played a leading part. The improved regulatory structures for which it called reflected his thinking. Only slightly less important to him was the campaign against fluoridati­on, in which he was prominent.

He much enjoyed lighter moments in the Lords. While settling up a bill with the cashier, he found himself “bumping bottoms with Brian Rix in our own Whitehall farce”.

He was one of the 92 hereditary peers who stayed in the Lords after Tony Blair’s reforms in 1999. Increasing physical frailty, arising from chronic fatigue syndrome, led him to seek formal retirement from the Lords in 2018 under a scheme introduced a few years earlier.

Baldwin’s first wife, Sarah James, an auctioneer, died in 2001. He is survived by their three sons, and by his second wife, Lydia Seagrave, a sculptor, whom he married in 2015.

His eldest son, Benedict, who lives in Sweden, born in 1973, succeeds as the 5th Earl Baldwin of Bewdley.

 ??  ?? after Harley Street failed to relieve the pain. He described what happened in an article published in 2003: “Hobbling with knee bandages and a mindset of incurabili­ty, I was directed by a colleague to a spiritual
after Harley Street failed to relieve the pain. He described what happened in an article published in 2003: “Hobbling with knee bandages and a mindset of incurabili­ty, I was directed by a colleague to a spiritual
 ??  ?? Baldwin: worked to revise hostile views of the interwar Conservati­ve prime minister Stanley Baldwin
Baldwin: worked to revise hostile views of the interwar Conservati­ve prime minister Stanley Baldwin

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom