Geoffrey Whiskard

Sir Geoffrey Granville Whiskard KCB KCMG (19 August 1886 – 19 May 1957) was a British civil servant and diplomat.[1]

Sir Geoffrey Granville Whiskard

KCB KCMG
Sir Geoffrey Whiskard, c.12 September 1935
British High Commissioner to Australia
In office
1936–1941
Succeeded bySir Ronald Cross, 1st Baronet
Personal details
Born19 August 1886
Beckenham, Kent
Died19 May 1957 (age 70)
13 Mill Street, Mildenhall, Suffolk
Alma materWadham College, Oxford

Early life and education

Whiskard was born at 3 Hartington Villas, Penge Road, Beckenham, Kent to Ernest Whiskard, a local bank manager and Lucy Marian Sutton, daughter of a political analyst. Shortly after the family moved to Kensington because Geoffrey's father Ernest had been appointed manager of the Capital and Counties Bank's local branch.

Whiskard was educated at St Paul's School, London and then in December 1904 he won a scholarship to Wadham College, Oxford, going up in October of the next year. He gained first class in Mods and Greats graduating in 1909.

Career

Geoffrey entered the Home Office in 1911 and served as an Assistant Secretary to the Chief Secretary for Ireland during the Anglo-Irish war,[2] then in the Colonial Office 1922–25 and in the Dominions Office 1925–35. He was High Commissioner to Australia 1936–41, and Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Works 1941–43 and at the Ministry of Town and Country Planning 1943–46.

Personal life

In 1915, he married Cynthia Reeves , having three children Richard, Mary and John. On 30 July 1940, Cynthia died of heart failure brought on by a severe asthma attack whilst visiting Sydney. Geoffrey later remarried to Eileen Margaret Anderson after he had retired from Government.

Writings

In 1947 Letters from a Civil Servant to his Son was published. Whiskard had decided the keep his name anonymous. The letters in Geoffrey's book are addressed to Richard, the oldest son, and chronicle major parts of his life whilst covering heartfelt themes of love and war. His leaving school, enrolling in Oxford University and at the outbreak of the Second World War, where he joined the Welsh Guards. It was here Richard became friends with the esteemed painter Rex Whistler. Lieutenant Richard Whiskard died on Wednesday, 2 August 1944 at the age of 24.

gollark: > You might want to check what the performance is to other SQL DBs before going with sqlite.Pretty great, actually?
gollark: I've heard of people using it for terabytes of stuff for bizarre reasons.
gollark: Just make sure to make an on-disk database and not an in-memory one, obviously.
gollark: > will sqlite work for stuff that doesnt fit in RAM?Yes.
gollark: Intel is still a *massively* larger company.

References

  1. "Obituary: Sir Geoffrey Whiskard". The Times. The Times Digital Archive. 21 May 1957. p. 13.
  2. "British Administration in Dublin Castle". Cairo Gang. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.