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John Redcliffe-Maud, Baron Redcliffe-Maud

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John Primatt Redcliffe Maud, Baron Redcliffe-Maud (February 3, 1906November 20, 1982) was a British civil servant and diplomat.

John Maud was educated at Eton College and New College, Oxford. At Oxford he was a member of the Oxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS). In 1928, he gained a one-year scholarship to Harvard University.

During World War II he was Master of Birkbeck College, London and was also based at Reading Gaol, working for the Ministry of Food. After the war, he worked at the Ministry of Education (19451952) and then the Ministry of Fuel and Power until 1958. He was High Commissioner in South Africa from 1959 to 1963, when he became Master of University College, Oxford, where he had been a Fellow before the war. He was made a life peer in 1967.

Lord Redcliffe-Maud is best known for the Redcliffe-Maud Report published in the late 1960s by a Royal Commission that he chaired, on the future of English Local Government, including county boundary changes; the report was effectively ignored by the Local Government Act 1972.

He retired as Master of University College in 1976, to be succeeded by the leading lawyer Lord Goodman. His 1973 portrait by Ruskin Spear can be seen in the National Portrait Gallery, London.

Redcliffe-Maud was married to Jean Hamilton, who was educated at Somerville College, Oxford. He is buried in Holywell Cemetery, Oxford.

References

  • Redcliffe-Maud, John, Experiences of an Optimist: The Memoirs of John Redcliffe-Maud. London: Hamish Hamilton, 1981. (ISBN 0241105692)


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