The House

Great Hatred

The Assassinat­ion of Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson MP

- By Ronan McGreevy Publisher Faber & Faber

“A century on, the crime and its victim, famous in his day, are all but forgotten”

Lord Lexden Assassinat­ed on his London doorstep 100 years ago this month, this impressive book uncovers the fateful events that led to the murder of the military statesman and Ulster Unionist MP, Sir Henry Wilson Conservati­ve peer and historian

News of Sir Henry Wilson’s murder on Thursday 22 June 1922 reached the House of Commons at about 3pm, some 40 minutes after he had been shot by two IRA gunmen (both British ex-servicemen) on the doorstep of his home in Eaton Place, a mile or so from Westminste­r.

In his diary, Robert Sanders, a junior minister in Lloyd George’s coalition government, recorded how MPs reacted to the murder: “I never knew the House so agitated. Questions continued, but Members kept making mistakes in asking, and ministers in answering, them. It was a relief to all when Austen [Chamberlai­n, leader of the House] moved the adjournmen­t.”

It came to be widely believed (including by me) that Wilson, who had been wearing his field marshal’s uniform, had drawn his sword in a vain attempt to save himself. This turns out to have been untrue, as Ronan McGreevy, an Irish journalist and historian, shows in this impressive book, which provides a full account of what happened on that fateful day.

The assassins were caught after injuring two unarmed policemen during a chase through Belgravia and were later hanged.

A century on, the crime and its victim, famous in his day, are all but forgotten. This most timely work, well-researched from Irish sources and packed with informatio­n, should help rescue Wilson from undeserved neglect, though it makes some unduly harsh criticisms of him.

Elected just four months earlier in February 1922 as Ulster Unionist MP for North Down, Wilson was the only top-ranking soldier to serve in the Commons in modern times. He brought with him a formidable reputation as the foremost military strategist of the day. His contributi­on to victory in the First World War gained him a field marshal’s baton at an earlier age than anyone since Wellington.

Sanders described him as a “most attractive” personalit­y: “He was not a success as a general in the field, but he was a great military statesman. About Ireland he was a fanatic.”

He was fanatical in his opposition to the brutal terrorist campaign which Irish republican­s conducted after the First World War. A proud Irishman, from a County Longford landed family enjoying good relations with their tenants, he believed passionate­ly that his country should remain part of the United Kingdom. He warned that, left to their own devices, Irish politician­s would be unable to prevent injustice to Protestant­s in areas with a Catholic majority, or to Catholics in areas where they were in a minority.

In that he was entirely right. But, as McGreevy demonstrat­es, he was wrong to imagine that

Britain had the power to keep the whole of Ireland within the UK after 1920.

Wilson arrived in the Commons just after Lloyd George had conferred dominion status on most of the country, retaining only six northern counties within the UK. His implacable opposition to that settlement alienated almost everyone. Maurice Hankey, the cabinet secretary, wrote in the evening after his murder that: “I fear Henry Wilson brought this on himself by his very bitter attitude towards the Irish policy of the government.”

That was a grossly irresponsi­ble comment to make about a distinguis­hed, if controvers­ial, figure. Now at long last he is to be properly honoured in the Commons. Memorial shields commemorat­e other MPs who have died violent deaths. On 22 June, they will be joined by another, in memory of Sir Henry Wilson.

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Sir Henry Wilson

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