What's The Context? Blogs by Gill Bennett 2013-2020. History Note No.23

Page 6

Foreword Gill Bennett – a birthday tribute

There’s an old saying that a nation without a history is like a man or woman without a memory. It may be trite, but it’s absolutely correct too. As a Minister and before that as an MP, I always had the belief that it was impossible properly to understand any contemporary issue without understanding its history. But this was not a view shared, as it turned out, by the Home Office. Early on in my time there, I asked for some historical background on a particularly tricky issue I was faced with. ‘Very sorry, Home Secretary’, but the Archivists’ Department was closed down a few years ago. Cuts, you know’, came the reply. You can therefore all imagine my immense relief when I moved to the FCO in June 2001, and discovered that there was a whole department called the Historians, led by a brilliant Chief Historian, Gill Bennett, whose 70th birthday we celebrate this evening. Gill came to work as a Research Assistant historian 49 years ago, in 1971, and in one capacity or another she has been involved with the FCO – or the FCDO as it now is – ever since. To my astonishment, I read in one biographical note about Gill that she had allegedly ‘retired’ 15 years ago! I wonder if I am the only person who hadn’t noticed this. She has carried on working not only for the FCO but other government departments, and in the course of this has developed a serious expertise in the history of our intelligence agencies and their work. As Gill has spelt out in a wonderful narrative account of her work, part of an oral history project, the work of the FCO Historians broadly divides into two – giving advice to Ministers and officials, and organising sections of the record for publication as official histories. The justification for the first role is pretty obvious – though its importance had obviously eluded the bean counters in the Treasury and Home office when they decided in the nineties to abolish the Home Office’s memory. The second however could easily be a target for cuts from those who naively think that memory doesn’t matter. It does. There will be thousands of professional historians who are deeply grateful to the Historians for the way in which they have made available impenetrable records – and this politician, for the help which I had when I wrote my recent book on the UK and Iran was invaluable. Gill started her career in 1972, just a year after the FCO had abolished its rule that any woman officer who married had to resign the service. It was still a man’s world. Gill tells a rather harrowing account of how she tried to juggle child care, and the office, and as a single parent, but managed this; and how gradually the Office saw just what talents she had, and got her involved not just in the Historians’ departments but many other aspects of the department’s work.

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Articles inside

28 VJ Day: 15 August 1945

5min
pages 91-93

29 Signing the Anglo American Financial Agreement: 6 December 1945

5min
pages 94-96

27 Opening of the Potsdam Conference: 17 July 1945

3min
pages 89-90

24 Sentencing of atomic spy Klaus Fuchs: 1 March 1950

3min
pages 82-83

25 VE Day, the end of the war in Europe: 8 May 1945

5min
pages 84-86

26 Outbreak of the Korean War: 25 June 1950

4min
pages 87-88

26 July 1939

3min
pages 80-81

22 Signature of the North Atlantic Treaty: 4 April 1949

4min
pages 77-79

21 The British guarantee to Poland: 31 March 1939

5min
pages 74-76

20 Soviet forces invade Czechoslovakia: 20 to 21 August 1968

5min
pages 71-73

19 George Brown resigns as Foreign Secretary: 15 March 1968

5min
pages 68-70

18 The resignation of Anthony Eden: 20 February 1938

5min
pages 65-67

December 1917

5min
pages 62-64

16 Devaluation of Sterling: 18 November 1967

5min
pages 59-61

14 Fidel Castro enters Havana in triumph: 8 January 1959

10min
pages 53-58

May 1956

5min
pages 44-46

13 Spy George Blake escapes from Wormwood Scrubs: 22 October 1966

6min
pages 50-52

9 The execution of Edith Cavell: 12 October 2015

13min
pages 37-43

12 Nasser announces the nationalisation of the Suez Canal: 26 July 1956

5min
pages 47-49

8 An atomic bomb is dropped on Hiroshima: 6 August 1945

8min
pages 33-36

7 The Yalta Conference opens: 4 February 1945

8min
pages 29-32

Polish cryptologists reveal they have cracked the Enigma code

2min
page 28

Eden orders an enquiry into the disappearance of Commander ‘Buster’ Crabb

2min
page 14

6 President Richard M. Nixon announces his resignation: 8 August 1974

4min
pages 26-27

Frank Roberts’ ‘Long Telegram’: 21 March 1946

8min
pages 15-19

5 D Day: 6 June 1944

6min
pages 23-25

Foreword

3min
pages 6-7

Formation of the Cheka, the first Soviet security and intelligence agency: 20

1min
page 22

1. The Munich Agreement: 30 September 1938

7min
pages 9-12

2 The death of President John F Kennedy: 22 November 1963

2min
page 13
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