- G. M. Young
George Malcolm Young (1882,
Greenhithe ,Kent – 1959) was an Englishhistorian , most famous for his long essay on Victorian times in England, "Portrait of an Age" (1936).Young was educated at St Paul's School and
Balliol College, Oxford . In 1905 he was elected a Fellow ofAll Souls College, Oxford . From 1908 to 1920 he was employed as a civil servant, initially with the Board of Education and from 1917 with theMinistry of Reconstruction . For many years he was a trustee of theNational Portrait Gallery and theBritish Museum ."Portrait of an Age" was an expanded version of the 89-page conclusion to "Early Victorian England", a two-volume collection which Young had edited in 1934. [Peter Stansky, Review of
George Kitson Clark (ed.), "Portrait of an Age", 1977 annotated edition, "The American Historical Review" (1979), pp. 165-6] .Simon Schama has described it as "An immortal classic, the greatest long essay ever written."Fact|date=January 2008Works
* "Gibbon", 1932
* (ed.) "Early Victorian England, 1830-1865". 2 vols, 1934.
* "Charles I and Cromwell: An Essay", 1935
* "Portrait of an Age", 1936
* "Daylight and Champaign: essays", 1937
* "The Government of Britain", 1941
* "Burke", 1943
* "Today and Yesterday: Collected Essays and Addresses", 1948
* "Last Essays", 1950
* "Stanley Baldwin", 1952
* "Mr Gladstone"
* "Rights and Duties in the Modern State"
* "Scott and History"
* "The Good Society"References
*L. E. Jones and E. T. Williams, [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/37076 ‘Young, George Malcolm (1882–1959)’] , rev., "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography", Oxford University Press, 2004
External links
* [http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?LinkID=mp04982 Portraits of G. M. Young] at
National Portrait Gallery
*NRA|P31563
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