Shawcross obituary, The Guardian: "Shawcross's ruthless pursuit of venality, when he led for the government at the Lynskey tribunal into alleged corruption at the board of trade, began a slow process of alienation from Labour in 1948. His political colleagues thought him a little too keen to bring down politicians, such as the junior minister John Belcher. This embarrassed Labour; but softpedalling - never the Shawcross way - would have been worse."
shawcross obituary The Times: "Many would say that it was in 1948 and 1949, as counsel for the Lynskey tribunal, that Shawcross scored his greatest forensic triumph. This tribunal was set up to investigate allegations of impropriety made against certain ministers and public officials. Shawcross announced that he would seek the truth "ruthlessly and relentlessly", and this he did, although the process necessarily involved much probing of the actions and motives of political colleagues and personal friends."
The Lynskey tribunal was a British government inquiry, set up in October 1948 to investigate rumours of possible corruption in the
Board of Trade. Under the chairmanship of a
High Court judge,
Sir George Lynskey, it sat in November and December 1948, hearing testimony from some sixty witnesses who included a number of government ministers and other high-ranking public servants. Much of the inquiry was centered on the relationship between the junior trade minister,
John Belcher, and a self-styled business agent,
Sidney Stanley, who claimed to have considerable influence in government circles which he was prepared to exercise on behalf of the business community. In its findings, published in January 1949, the tribunal found that Belcher, who admitted that he had accepted hospitality and small gifts from Stanley and from the distiller Sir Maurice Bloch, had been improperly influenced in his ministerial decision-making, although it dismissed allegations that he had received large sums of cash. A director of the
Bank of England,
George Gibson, was likewise found to have used his position to obtain personal advantage. All other ministers and officials were exonerated. Belcher resigned from his ministerial post and from parliament; Gibson was required to resign from his Bank directorship and from other public offices. Although the possibility of criminal proceedings was briefly considered, no further action was taken against any of the participants in the inquiry.
John Freeman Information
Sources
[1] John W. Young: "John Freeman 1969–1971", in The Washington Embassy: British Ambassadors to the United States, 1939–77, eds M. Hopkins, S. Kelly, J. Young. Palgrave Macmillan 2009
[2] N.H. Twitchell: The Politics of the Rope: The Campaign to Abolish Capital Punishment in Britain, 1955-1969, Arena Books, 2012. p.46 lists Freeman as a committee member of the NCACP
[3] Hugh Purcell: A Very Private Celebrity: The Nine Lives of John Freeman, Biteback Publishing, 2015. Chapters 1, 2, 3 and 4(part) Unpaginated.
[4] Peter Hennessy: Introduction in Hennessy and Shepherd: Reflections: Conversations with Politicians Hass Publishing, 2016. Unpaginated
Early life: Purcell 2015 Ch. 1; Ind obit; Purcell 2013; ODNB
Freeman was born on 19 February 1915 in North London, the elder of two sons of Horace Freeman, a
barrister, and his wife Beatrice Mary, née Craddock. Soon after his birth the family moved to a large villa in the suburb of
Brondesbury. The home was comfortable and prosperous, but lacked warmth and affection, so that the young Freeman developed a high degree of independence and self-sufficiency from a very early age. When he was 13 he won a scholarship to the prestigious
Westminster School, which he attended as a weekly boarder. Here he was much influenced by the progressive attitudes of his headmaster, Harold Costley-White, whose initiatives brought to the school guest speakers such as
Mahatma Gandhi, in London for the
Round Table Conferences of 1930–1932, Professor
Harold Laski from the
London School of Economics, and the scientist
Julian Huxley. Freeman heard these and others; he also witnessed, outside the school gates, a demonstration and near-riot mounted by the November 1932 hunger marchers, as they attempted to force their way into the nearby
House of Commons. These experiences led to the development of an early social and political consciousness, and when he was 17 he joined the
Labour Party.
Oxford and after
In October 1933 Freeman entered
Brasenose College, Oxford, where he pursued numerous interests. Together with his future Labour Party colleague
Woodrow Wyatt he helped to found the Experimental Theatre Group, as an alternative to the established
Oxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS). He edited the student newspaper Cherwell, where he used the pen-name "Flavus" to publish a regular column entitled "Morals and Politics". These articles reflected a strong left-wing perspective; they included a sympathetic account of the arrival in London, on 31 October 1936, of the
Jarrow marchers, led by the radical Labour MP
Ellen Wilkinson, whom Freeman was later to acknowledge as a strong influence on his politics. In other articles he gave strong support to the
Republicans in the
Spanish Civil War which erupted in the summer of 1936, and attacked the activities of
Oswald Mosley's
British Union of Fascists when they held a rally in Oxford. Amid these activities he managed to lead a hectic social life, involving wine, women and fast cars. His academic work suffered accordingly, and he left Oxford in 1937 with a
third-class degree.
For the two years following his departure from Oxford, Freeman worked for an advertising agency in London, where he lived on a houseboat and enjoyed to the full the social and literary pleasures of London life. On 18 August 1938 he married Elizabeth Allen Johnston, the daughter of a
chartered accountant.
War service
On 27 June 1940, following the outbreak of war the previous year, Freeman enlisted with the
Coldstream Guards, and completed his basic training at the Guards' training depot at
Caterham. Persuaded that he should apply for a commission, he was posted to the
Rifle Brigade as a
second lieutenant in December 1940. After an extended period of training, the 1st Battalion of the Rifle Brigade departed for the Western Desert in Sepember 1941.