Everything about Victor Hope 2nd Marquess Of Linlithgow totally explained
Victor Alexander John Hope, 2nd Marquess of Linlithgow KG,
KT,
GCSI,
GCIE,
OBE,
PC (
24 September 1887 -
5 January 1952) was a British statesman who served as Governor-General and
Viceroy of India from 1936 to
1943.
Early Life and Family
Hope was born at Hopetoun House,
South Queensferry,
Linlithgowshire (
West Lothian), on 24 September
1887. He was the elder son of John Adrian Louis Hope, seventh earl of Hopetoun, afterwards
John Hope, 1st Marquess of Linlithgow, first governor-general of
Australia and his mother, Hersey Everleigh-de-Moleyns (born 1867, died 1937), daughter of the fourth
Baron Ventry.
He was educated at
Eton College and in 1908 succeeded his father as second marquess. On 19 April 1911 he married Doreen Maud (born 1886, died 1965), who herself was the younger daughter of Sir Frederick Milner. They had two sons and three daughters. Hope's oldest son,
Charles Hope, later succeeded him as Marquess. His other son,
John Hope, became a Conservative statesman and was made 1st
Baron Glendevon. Hope's granddaughter
Lucinda Green became a famous
equestrian.
Early career
Linlithgow served as an officer on the Western Front during the
First World War, ending the war with the rank of
Colonel. He commanded of a battalion of the
Royal Scots. He was mentioned in dispatches and made an Officer of the British Empire,
OBE.
He then served in various minor roles in the
Conservative governments of the 1920s and 30s. From 1922 till 1924 he served as the civil lord of the
Admiralty, becoming chairman of the
Unionist Party Organization in 1924 for two years. He also served as President of the
Navy League from 1924 until
1931. He served as chairman of the
Medical Research Council and of the governing body of the
Imperial College of Science and Technology. Linlithgow was also chairman of the committee on the distribution and prices of agricultural produce and president of the Edinburgh and East of Scotland College of
Agriculture until
1933. In the late 1920s he was Chairman of the
Royal Commission on Agriculture in
India and in the 1930s of the select committee on Indian constitutional reform. He declined governorship of
Madras before eventually becoming
Viceroy of India
Viceroy
On the 18th April,
1936, he succeeded
Lord Willingdon as Viceroy of India. Linlithgow implemented the plans for local self-government embodied in the
Government of India Act of
1935, which led to government led by the
Congress Party in 5 of the 11 provinces, but the recalcitrance of the princes prevented the full establishment of Indian self government.
With the outbreak of the
Second World War, Linlithgow's appeal for unity led to the resignation of the Congress ministries. Disputes between the British administration and Congress ultimately led to massive Indian civil disobedience in the
Quit India movement in
1942. Linlithgow suppressed the disturbances and arrested the Congress leaders.
Character
It was during this period that, while attending Christmas morning service at the Cathedral of the Redemption in Delhi with his large family, whose surname was Hope, he'd to sit through a sermon delivered by the verbose Bishop of Calcutta and
Metropolitan of India attacking his attitude to Congress and Home Rule; the peroration of the sermon led to uncontrollable laughter in church as the bishop gestured at the viceregal pew and said "...and all we've left is an array of blasted Hopes."
Retirement
Upon Hope's retirement in
1943, his seven year tenure as viceroy had been the longest in the history of the
Raj. He was considered by his obituarists to have been one of the most skillful colonial officers to have held the highest office. A sincere
Presbyterian, he served as lord high commissioner to the
Church of Scotland in
1944 and
1945. He died in
1952.
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