- Wickham Steed
Henry Wickham "Stickum" Steed (
10 October 1871 -13 January 1956 ) was a Britishjournalist andhistorian . He was one of the first English speakers to sound warning bells about the new German ChancellorAdolf Hitler .Life
He was born in
Long Melford ,England .Appointed by
Joseph Pulitzer as Paris correspondent for the New York "World", he later joined "The Times " as a foreign correspondent and was editor from 1919 until his resignation in 1922. The following year he became editor of "Review of Reviews " (1923-30), the journal that had been established byWilliam Stead in 1890.As a foreign correspondent, Steed lived in
Vienna before the war, during which time he acquired a deep contempt forAustria-Hungary .Margaret Macmillan, "Paris 1919", p. 114f.] Ananti-Semite and an Germanophobe, in an editorial Steed wrote in "The Times " on31 July ,1914 , Steed labeled efforts to stop the impending war as "a dirty German-Jewish international financial attempt to bully us into advocating neutrality". [Niall Ferguson, "The Pity of War", p. 32, 195.] From22 July 1914 on, Steed in close agreement with "The Times"' proprietor, Lord Northcliffe, took a very bellicose line and in editorials written on29 July and31 July , Steed urged that theBritish Empire should enter the coming war. [Niall Ferguson, "The Pity of War", p. 217.]An leading expert on
Eastern Europe , his views had much influence with decision-makers such as high level bureaucrats and Cabinet politicians in theFirst World War and its aftermath. During the war, Steed befriended anti-Habsburg émigrés such asEdvard Beneš ,Ante Trumbić ,Tomáš Masaryk andRoman Dmowski and advised the British government to seek the liquidation ofAustria-Hungary as a war aim. In particular, Steed was a very strong advocate of uniting all of the South Slavic peoples such as theCroats , theSerbs , theSlovenes , etc into a federation to be calledYugoslavia . The British Ambassador toItaly claimed in a diplomatic dispatch that Steed's fondness for the Yugoslav concept deprived from a relationship he maintained for a number of years "filially I believe rather maritally" with a Slavic woman from theBalkans . In October 1918, Steed met with the Serbian Prime MinisterNikola Pašić to gain his support for the Yugoslav concept; Steed was deeply angered when he learned that Pašić saw the new state as merely as extension of greaterSerbia and had no intention of sharing power with the Croats or the Slovenes. Steed charged Pašić with being a new "sultan" and severed his friendship with Paśić.After the war, Steed strongly disapproved of the
Bolshevik regime inRussia . In an editorial written in another Northcliffe paper, the "Daily Mail " on28 March 1919 , Steed accused the British Prime MinisterDavid Lloyd George , whom Steed detested of betraying the White Russians because of a plot by "international Jewish financiers" and the Germans to help the Bolsheviks stay in power. [Margaret Macmillan, "Paris 1919", p. 80.]In 1920, Steed endorsed the notorious anti-Semitic forgery "
The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion " as genuine in an editorial in "The Times". In the same editorial, Steed blamed the Jews forWorld War I , the Bolshevik regime and called Jews the greatest threat to the British Empire. However, in 1921, when the Time’sConstantinople correspondent proved that the "The Protocols" were a forgery, Steed retracted his endorsement of "The Protocols".Books by H. Wickham Steed
* "The Habsburg Monarchy" (1913)
* "A Short History of Austria-Hungary and Poland" (1914)
* "The Press" (1938)ee also
*
Robert William Seton-Watson Notes
References
*Ferguson, Niall "The Pity of War", London: Basic Books, 1999.
*Macmillan, Margaret "Paris 1919" New York: Random House, 2002.External links
* [http://www.literature.at/elib/index.php5?title=Hapsburg_monarchy_-_Habsburg_-_Henry_W_Steed_-_1919 "The Habsburg Monarchy" (1913)] ) eLibrary Austria Project (eLib Projekt) full text
* [http://www.historicaltextarchive.com/books.php?op=viewbook&bookid=2&pre=1 "A Short History of Austria-Hungary and Poland" (1914)] Historical Text Archive full text
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