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W.P. Crozier Papers

Open to any accredited reader. Accounts, both typescript and holograph, of interviews conducted by Crozier, with 62 statesmen and politicians, between 1931-1944. The interviews are concerned with European politics and the Nazi threat, the Jewish National Home and the Far East (India and China). There are 175 major interviews with 23 leading politicians, including Stanley Baldwin, Eduard Benes, Neville Chamberlain, Winston Churchill, Anthony Eden, David Lloyd George, Arthur Henderson, Sir Samuel Hoare, Leslie Hore Belisha, Ivan Maisky, Herbert Morrison, Jan Masaryk, Sir John Simon, Sir Robert Vansittart. There are also 57 other interviews with other notable figures such as Leo Amery, Lord Halifax, Neville Laski, Jawaharlal Nehru, L.B.Namier, Eleanor Roosevelt and Chaim Weizmann. The interviews are dominated by foreign affairs, Crozier's own interest, as well as the state of the armed forces. The colelctions comprises: Box 1 Box 2 Box 3 Box 4 Box 5 Off the Record: Political Interviews 1933-1943 Many of Crozier's interviews were published in the collection, W P Crozier, , ed. by A J P Taylor, (London: Hutchinson 1973). This collection includes most of the interviews in their entirety, although some have been cut. Some of Crozier's interviews were not included in Taylor's book and have remained unpublished. Manchester Guardian Times Manchester Guardian William Percival Crozier (1879-1944), editor of the , 1932-44, was born at Stanhope, Durham in 1879, the son of a Wesleyan Methodist minister. He was educated at Manchester Grammar School and Trinity College, Oxford, where he took a first in . Crozier worked as a schoolmaster, before joining the staff of the , and from here he moved to the in 1903. Crozier quickly established himself at the newspaper, becoming C P Scott's right-hand man, and doing much to modernise the newspaper. In 1912 he became news editor, and was responsible for developing the paper's foreign news service. In 1918 he became the paper's military correspondent, and in 1921 was made a director of Manchester Guardian Ltd. Following the unexpected death of Edward Scott (CP Scott's son) in April 1932, Crozier was appointed editor. Guardian Manchester Guardian As a journalist, Crozier had a reputation for scholarly allusions in his writings, particularly from the Bible and the classics. His leader articles were noted for their economy of style and careful argument. Crozier was skilled in spotting new trends in journalism, and he ensured that the gave serious coverage to films and broadcasting from an early date. His editorship saw the consolidate its reputation as a quality national newspaper, based on the excellence of its news coverage. Crozier rejected the view that the paper should be seen as a provincial newspaper for Northern England. Guardian Guardian As editor, he proved a less partisan Liberal than Scott in domestic politics. However Crozier's main political interest was in foreign affairs, particularly in Europe. He ensured that the took a very outspoken line on Nazi Germany. He was also an ardent supporter of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Crozier undertook a series of interviews with leading politicians, diplomats and political activists on such questions from the mid-1930s through to his death in 1944. These interviews, which form the basis of this collection, were not published in the , but provided private information for Crozier, which he could use in his leader columns. He travelled regularly to London to make the interviews, and then wrote them up on his return to Manchester. They provide invaluable information about the views of leading statesmen and policy-makers in the years leading up and during the Second World War. Crozier, who did not enjoy the best of health in later years, died of heart disease in 1944.

Collectie
  • EHRI
Type
  • Archief
Rechten
Identificatienummer van European Holocaust Research Infrastructure
  • gb-006352-wpc
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