Norman Gash

Norman Gash CBE FBA FRSE FRHistS FRSL (16 January 1912 in Meerut, British Raj – 1 May 2009 in Somerset) was a British historian, best remembered for a two-volume biography of British prime minister Sir Robert Peel. He was professor of modern history at the University of St Andrews from 1955–80 and specialised in the 19th century.

Norman Gash

Early life

Gash was born in Meerut, United Provinces (now Uttar Pradesh) in 1912, the son of Frederick Gash, a soldier in the Royal Berkshire Regiment, and of Kate Gash, née Hunt. He attended Wilson Road School and Palmer School in Reading, before gaining a scholarship to Reading School. He then attended St John's College, Oxford as a scholar, where he took a First in History in 1933. He subsequently completed a B.Litt. thesis on "The rural unrest in England in 1830 with special reference to Berkshire".

Biography of Sir Robert Peel

The first volume of Gash's biography of Sir Robert Peel Mr Secretary Peel (1961) followed his life up until 1830, including his successful period at the Home Office in the 1820s and as far as Catholic Emancipation. The second volume Sir Robert Peel (1972) covered his opposition to the Great Reform Act and his tenures as Prime Minister from 1834-5 and 1841-6. Gash argued that Peel's reforms were paramount in ending the "hungry forties" and bringing about Victorian prosperity. Though Gash's interpretations of Peel have been challenged in recent decades, by historians including Boyd Hilton, this work remains the definitive Peel biography.

Works

  • Mr Secretary Peel (1961)
  • Reaction and Reconstruction in English Politics 1832-52 (1965)
  • Age of Peel (1968)
  • Politics in the Age of Peel (1971)
  • Sir Robert Peel (1972)
  • Gash: Aristocracy People: Britain 1815-65 (1980)
  • Lord Liverpool - the Life and Political Career of Robert Banks Jenkinson, 2nd Earl Liverpool (1985)
  • Pillars of Government and Other Essays on State and Society, 1770-1880 (1986)
  • Wellington: Studies in the Political and Military Career of the First Duke of Wellington (1990)
  • Wellington Anecdotes (1992)
  • Robert Surtees and Early Victorian Society (1993)
gollark: In an individual interaction, vengeance is bad, because you're just harming someone even though doing it afterward won't cause them to have not done the thing for which you are taking revenge.
gollark: Which kind of works even if you haven't taken vengeance on *anyone* yet, if people *think* you are likely to.
gollark: As I said, if people know "hmm yes if I do bad things to this person they will have VENGEANCE" they are less likely to do those bad things.
gollark: Or I guess not even in that weird way.
gollark: > vengeance is a vicious cycle and doesn't actually help anyoneAh, but it *does*, acausally speaking in some confusing way.
  • Obituary: Norman Gash, Daily Telegraph, 17 May 2009
  • Links to biographical memoirs of fellows of the British Academy, including Norman Gash
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