John Galway Foster is another recent recruit to the Milner Group and, like Berlin, won

his entry by way of All Souls (1924). He is also a graduate of New College and from

1935 to 1939 was lecturer in Private International Law at Oxford. In 1939 he went to the

Embassy in Washington as First Secretary and stayed for almost five years. In 1944 he

was commissioned a brigadier on special service and the following year gained

considerable prestige by winning a Conservative seat in Parliament in the face of the

Labour tidal wave. He is still a Fellow of All Souls, after twenty-five years, and this fact

alone would indicate he has a position as an important member of the Group.

Roger Mellor Makins, son of a Conservative M.P., was elected a Fellow of All Souls

immediately after graduation from Christ Church in 1925. He joined the diplomatic

service in 1928 and spent time in London, Washington, and (briefly) Oslo in the next

nine years. In 1937 he became assistant adviser on League of Nations affairs to the

Foreign Office. He was secretary to the British delegation to the Evian Conference on

Refugees from Germany in 1938 and became secretary to the Intergovernmental

Committee on Refugees set up at that meeting. In 1939 he returned to the Foreign Office

as adviser on League of Nations Affairs but soon became a First Secretary; he was

adviser to the British delegation at the New York meeting of the International Labour

Conference in 1941 and the following year joined the staff of the Resident Minister in

West Africa. When the Allied Headquarters in the Mediterranean area was set up in 1943,

he joined the staff of the Resident British Minister with that unit. At the end of the war, in

1945, he went to the Embassy in Washington with the rank of Minister. In this post he

had the inestimable advantage that his wife, whom he married in 1934, was the daughter

of the late Dwight F. Davis, Secretary of War in the Hoover Administration. During this

period Makins played an important role at various international organizations. He was the

United Kingdom representative on the Interim Commission for Food and Agriculture of

the United Nations in 1945; he was adviser to the United Kingdom delegation to the first

FAO Conference at Quebec the same year; he was a delegate to the Atlantic City meeting

of UNRRA in the following year. In 1947 he left Washington to become Assistant Under

Secretary of State in the Foreign Office in London.

Another important member of All Souls who appeared briefly in Washington during

the war was John H. A. Sparrow. Graduated from Winchester School and New College

by 1927, he became an Eldon Law Scholar and a Fellow of All Souls in 1929. He is still a

Fellow of the latter after twenty years. Commissioned in the Coldstream Guards in 1940,

he was in Washington on a confidential military mission during most of 1940 and was

attached to the War Office from 1942 to the end of the war.

Certain other members of the Group were to be found in the United States during the

period under discussion. We have already mentioned the services rendered to the

Ministry of Information by J. W. Wheeler-Bennett in New York from 1939 to 1944.

Robert J. Stopford was Financial Counselor to the British Embassy in 1940-1943. We

should also mention that F. W. Eggleston, chief Australian member of the Group, was

Australian Minister in Washington from 1944 to 1946. And the story of the Milner

Group's activities in Washington would not be complete without at least mentioning

Percy E. Corbett

Percy Corbett of Prince Edward Island, Canada, took a M.A. degree at McGill

University in 1915 and went to Balliol as a Rhodes Scholar. He was a Fellow of All Souls

in 1920-1928 and a member of the staff of the League of Nations in 1920-1924. He was

Professor of Roman Law at McGill University from 1924 to 1937 and had been Professor

of Government and Jurisprudence and chairman of the Department of Political Science at

Yale since 1944. He has always been close to the Milner Group, participating in many of

their Canadian activities, such as the Canadian Royal Institute of International Affairs,

the unofficial British Commonwealth relations conferences, and the Institute of Pacific

Relations. He was chairman of the Pacific Council of the last organization in 1942.

During the war he spent much of his time in the United States, especially in Washington,

engaged in lobbying activities for the British Embassy, chiefly in Rhodes Scholarship and

academic circles but also in government agencies. Since the war ended, he has obtained,

by his position at Yale, a place of considerable influence, especially since Yale began, in

1948, to publish its new quarterly review called World Politics. On this review, Professor

Corbett is one of the more influential members. At present he must be numbered among

the three most important Canadian members of the Milner Group, the other two being

Vincent Massey and George Parkin Glazebrook.

In view of the emphasis which the Milner Group has always placed on publicity and

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