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Duncan Sandys

Duncan Edwin Duncan-Sandys, Baron Duncan-Sandys[1] CH, PC (/sændz/; 24 January 1908 – 26 November 1987), was a British politician and minister in successive Conservative governments in the 1950s and 1960s. He was a son-in-law of Winston Churchill and played a key role in promoting European unity after World War II.

The Lord Duncan-Sandys

Office Created

Edwin Duncan Sandys

(1908-01-24)24 January 1908
Sandford Orcas, Dorset, England

26 November 1987(1987-11-26) (aged 79)
London, England

(m. 1935; div. 1960)
Marie-Claire Schmitt
(m. 1962)

4, including Edwina and Laura

Diplomat

1937–1946

Early life[edit]

Sandys, born on 24 January 1908 at the Manor House, Sandford Orcas, Dorset, was the son of George John Sandys, a Conservative Member of Parliament (1910–1918), and Mildred Helen Cameron.[2] Sandys' parents divorced in January 1921 when he was 12 years old.[3][4] His mother married Frederick Hamilton Lister in October that year, becoming Mildred Helen Lister.[5] He was educated at Eton College and Magdalen College, Oxford.

Wartime career[edit]

During the Second World War Sandys fought with 51st (London) HAA Regiment in the Norwegian campaign and was wounded in action; this left him with a permanent limp.[10]


His father-in-law gave him his first ministerial post as Financial Secretary to the War Office from 1941 to 1944 during the wartime coalition government. Sandys had been wartime Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Supply. W. A. Robotham who had been in the Ministry as "Chief Engineer of Tank Design" wrote that he was knowledgeable on army matters. Robotham of Rolls-Royce who had headed development of the Meteor tank engine in WWII was surprised and pleased when in 1963 Sandys said "I regard the adoption of the Meteor tank engine as the absolute turning-point in the history of British tank development", at the opening of a Rolls-Royce aero engine factory at East Kilbride (aero engines being Rolls-Royce's main business).[12]


From 1944 to 1945 he served as Minister of Works for the remainder of the coalition and in the Churchill Caretaker Ministry. While a minister he was chairman of a War Cabinet Committee for defence against German flying bombs and rockets, on which he frequently clashed with the scientist and intelligence expert R. V. Jones.[13] However, he lost his seat in the 1945 general election. He resigned his TA commission as a lieutenant-colonel the following year.[10]

Post-war parliamentary career[edit]

Sandys was elected to parliament once again at the 1950 general election for Streatham and, when the Conservatives regained power in 1951, he was appointed Minister of Supply. For most of his time in that role, his private secretary was Jack Charles. As Minister of Housing from 1954, he introduced the Clean Air Act and in 1955 introduced the green belts.


He was appointed Minister of Defence in 1957 and quickly produced the 1957 Defence White Paper that proposed a radical shift in the Royal Air Force by ending the use of fighter aircraft in favour of missile technology. Though later ministers reversed the policy, the lost orders and cuts in research were responsible for several British aircraft manufacturers going out of business. As Minister of Defence he saw the rationalisation (merger) of much of the British military aircraft and engine industry.


Sandys continued as a minister at the Commonwealth Relations Office, later combining it with the Colonies Office, until the Conservative government lost power in 1964. In this role he was responsible for granting several colonies their independence and was involved in managing the British response to several conflicts involving the armed forces of the newly independent countries of East Africa.[18]


He remained in the shadow cabinet until 1966 when he was sacked by Edward Heath. He had strongly supported Ian Smith in the dispute over Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence. He was not offered a post when the Conservatives won the 1970 general election, but instead served as leader of the United Kingdom delegation to the Council of Europe and Western European Union until 1972 when he announced his retirement. The next year he was made a member of the Order of the Companions of Honour.


In 1974 he retired from parliament and was awarded a life peerage on 2 May. As the title of Baron Sandys was already held by another family, he followed the example of George Brown and incorporated his first name in his title, changing his surname to Duncan-Sandys.[19] He was created Baron Duncan-Sandys, of the City of Westminster, on 2 May 1974.[1]


He was an active early member of the Conservative Monday Club.

Personal life[edit]

In 1935, Sandys married Diana Churchill, daughter of the future prime minister Winston Churchill. They divorced in 1960.


In 1962, he married Marie-Claire (née Schmitt), who had been previously married to Robert Hudson, 2nd Viscount Hudson. The marriage lasted until Sandys' death.


It has long been speculated that he may have been the 'headless man' whose identity was concealed during the scandalous divorce trial of Margaret Campbell, Duchess of Argyll, in 1963.[20]


Sandys died on 26 November 1987 at his home in London.[21] He is buried in the churchyard of St Nicholas in Child Okeford, Dorset. His grave is marked by a horizontal white slab.[22]

The Hon. Julian Sandys (19 September 1936 – 15 August 1997)

The Hon. (born 22 December 1938)

Edwina Sandys

The Hon. Celia Sandys (born 18 May 1943). She married firstly Michael Kennedy and secondly (divorced 1979).

Dennis Walters

From Sandys’ first marriage, with Diana Churchill:


From his second marriage, with Marie-Claire Schmitt:

Interests[edit]

Among Sandys' other interests was historic architecture. He formed the Civic Trust in 1957 and was its president; the Royal Institution of British Architects made him an honorary Fellow in 1968, and the Royal Town Planning Institute made him an honorary member. He was also a trustee of the World Security Trust.


Between 1969 and 1984 he was President of Europa Nostra and acted for the preservation of the European cultural and architectural heritage.


His business activities included a Directorship of the Ashanti Goldfields Corporation, which was later part of Lonrho of which he became chairman. He was therefore caught up in the scandal in which Lonrho was revealed to have bribed several African countries and broken international sanctions against Rhodesia, as well as the "unpleasant and unacceptable face of capitalism" episode involving eight directors being sacked by Tiny Rowland.[23]

The Impact of Hitler – British Policies and Policy 1933–1940, Cambridge University Press, 1975, p. 415, ISBN 0-521-20582-4.

Cowling, Maurice

The Guardian, 10 August 2000.

'Headless men' in sex scandal finally named

New York Times, 7 November 1987

Obituary

in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

Newspaper clippings about Duncan Sandys

held at Churchill Archives Centre

The Papers of Lord Duncan-Sandys

British Army Officers 1939−1945