- Walter Cunliffe, 1st Baron Cunliffe
Walter Cunliffe, 1st Baron Cunliffe GBE (
4 December 1855 -6 January 1920 ) wasGovernor of the Bank of England from 1913 to 1918, during the criticalWorld War I era. He was created 1stBaron Cunliffe in 1914.Background
Walter Cunliffe was born in
London 4 December 1855 , the eldest of four brothers and two sisters. His father,James Cunliffe , was highly involved with the development of the North Eastern Railway, and became a merchant banker in the 1860s.Walter Cunliffe entered the banking industry in 1880, after being educated at
Harrow School and Trinity College atCambridge University . Together with his two brothers Arthur Robert and Leonard Daneham, he founded the merchant bankCunliffe Brothers in 1890, on 1 January 1920 it was absorbed by the merchant bank Frühling and Goschen, it then becameGoschen and Cunliffe (which failed in December 1939).In government service, Cunliffe worked under Chancellors of the Exchequer
Lloyd George andAndrew Bonar Law as Governor of the Bank of England. Cunliffe conflicted with Law in 1917, when he felt that the Treasury was taking too much of a role in maintaining thePound sterling exchange rate .At the Bank of England, Cunliffe personally wrote one of the first office
dress code s for women, noting that he was "pained by some of the costumes he encountered" in the hallways. The policy was conservative, allowing that "During the summer, white blouses are allowed but they must be absolutely white without coloured pattern or design upon them."Cunliffe Committee
As Governor of the Bank of England, Cunliffe chaired a committee, known as the Cunliffe Committee, for the purpose of reporting recommendations on the post-
World War I transition of the British economy. The committee reported in 1918 that "it is imperative that after the war, the conditions necessary for the maintenance of an effectivegold standard should be restored without delay." According to author Peter Bernstein, Cunliffe criticized one of the committee's dissenting members, a youngJohn Maynard Keynes , by stating that "Mr. Keynes, in commercial circles, is not considered to have any knowledge or experience in practical exchange or business problems."References
*Beamish, David. [http://website.lineone.net/~david.beamish/peerages2.htm "United Kingdom peerage creations 1801 to 2005: a list compiled by David Beamish"] Accessed
March 6 2006 .
*cite book|first=Peter L.|last=Bernstein|title="The Power of Gold: History of an Obsession"|year=2000|publisher=Wiley|id=ISBN 0-471-00378-6
* [http://www.gold.org/value/reserve_asset/history/monetary_history/vol2/1918aug15.html "Interim Report of the Cunliffe Committee, 1918"] " [http://www.gold.org World Gold Council] ", Accessed onMarch 6 2006 .
* [http://www.tyrrellswoodgolfclub.com/thepeople.htm "Tyrrells Wood Golf Club - Club History - The People"] " [http://www.tyrrellswoodgolfclub.com Tyrrells Wood Golf Club website] ", AccessedMarch 8 2006 .
* [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=9028215 Cunliffe, Walter Cunliffe, 1st Baron.] (2006). "Encyclopædia Britannica ". AccessedMarch 8 2006 .
*Bodenstein, Julia. [http://learning.unl.ac.uk/humanIT/it302/OfficePoliticsExbn.pdf office / politics / women in the workplace 1860-2004] " [http://learning.londonmet.ac.uk/ London Metropolitan University website] ", AccessedMarch 8 2006 .
*Peden, George. [http://www.dur.ac.uk/History/confs/papersconf/peden.doc "The Treasury and the City, 1901-c.1960"] " [http://www.dur.ac.uk/History/confs/papersconf/confstr.html Department of History] ,University of Durham website", AccessedMarch 8 2006 . [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/37332?docPos=3] Marcus Falkner Cunliffe (1922–1990)+ Sir Robert Alfred Cunliffe (1839–1905)
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