Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
economics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Ben Pimlott

British historian (1945–2004)


Summary

British historian (1945–2004)

FieldValue
nameBen Pimlott
honorific_suffixFBA
imageBen Pimlott.jpg
captionPimlott in 1984
birth_nameBenjamin John Pimlott
birth_date
birth_placeMerton, England, United Kingdom
death_date
death_placeLondon, England, United Kingdom
citizenship
educationRokeby School
Marlborough College
alma_materWorcester College, Oxford
Newcastle University
occupationHistorian
spouse
children3

Marlborough College Newcastle University Benjamin John Pimlott FBA (4 July 1945 – 10 April 2004) was an historian of the post-war period in Britain. He made a substantial contribution to the literary genre of political biography. He has worked on political biographies about Hugh Dalton, Harold Wilson, and Queen Elizabeth II.

Background

Ben Pimlott was born in Merton, Surrey, now Greater London, on 4 July 1945. His father was John Pimlott, a civil servant at the Home Office and former private secretary to Herbert Morrison. His mother, Ellen Dench Howes Pimlott, was American; her ancestors were Pilgrims, and she was a descendant of a victim of the Salem witch trials.

In the February 1974 general election, Pimlott contested Arundel on behalf of the Labour Party, and Cleveland and Whitby the following October. Having lost on both occasions, he also contested the 1979 election, after which he left the North East to take up a research post at the London School of Economics, moving to a lectureship at Birkbeck College, London in 1981.

Writing

During 1987–88, he was political editor of the New Statesman magazine and took on the post of Professor of Contemporary History at Birkbeck in 1988. For the following two years, Pimlott was responsible, with friends, for the short-lived journal Samizdat.

Aside from his attempts at a Parliamentary career in the 1970s, not to mention his tenure as Chairman of the Fabian Society in 1993/1994, Pimlott is best remembered for his works of political biography including the lives of Hugh Dalton (1985), Harold Wilson (1992), and a study of Queen Elizabeth II (1996). His study of Dalton won him the Whitbread Prize.

His other books include Labour and the Left in the 1930s (1977), The Trade Unions in British Politics (with Chris Cook, 1982), Fabian Essays in Socialist Thought (1984), The Alternative (with Tony Wright and Tony Flower, 1990), Frustrate their Knavish Tricks (1994) and Governing London (with Nirmala Rao, 2002).

Views and legacy

Many of Pimlott's theses have stood the test of time, even if they were marginally controversial when originally published. His studies of the 1930s Labour left, the life of Harold Wilson and the constitutional effect of the monarchy in post-war Britain are said to have made his reputation as a biographer and even bestowed some additional credibility upon the subjects, all of which have received critical accounts under the pen of others. Pimlott was a critic of the concept of the post-war consensus in British politics, and believed that no such consensus actually existed.

In 1996, his works were recognised with a fellowship of the British Academy. In 1998, he became Warden of Goldsmiths, University of London.

Personal life, death and legacy

In 1977, Pimlott married Jean Seaton, a lecturer on communications and the media at the University of Westminster. They had three children.

Pimlott died from complications of an intracerebral hemorrhage and acute myeloid leukaemia at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery on 10 April 2004, at the age of 58.

References

Sources

References

  1. Morgan, Kenneth O.. (2009). "Pimlott, Benjamin John [Ben] (1945–2004), historian and political commentator".
  2. (13 April 2004). "Ben Pimlott". The Telegraph.
  3. (2007). "Benjamin John Pimlott: 1945–2004". [[The British Academy]].
  4. Morgan, Kenneth O.. (12 April 2004). "Obituary: Ben Pimlott". The Guardian.
  5. (14 April 2004). "Obituary: Ben Pimlott". Liverpool Daily Post.
  6. (17 April 2004). "Ben Pimlott, 58, Historian and Biographer". [[The New York Times]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Ben Pimlott — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report