Sir Eyre Crowe

British diplomat
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Also known as: Sir Eyre Alexander Barby Wichart Crowe
Quick Facts
In full:
Sir Eyre Alexander Barby Wichart Crowe
Born:
July 30, 1864, Leipzig
Died:
April 28, 1925, Swanage, Dorset, England
Also Known As:
Sir Eyre Alexander Barby Wichart Crowe

Sir Eyre Crowe (born July 30, 1864, Leipzig—died April 28, 1925, Swanage, Dorset, England) was a British diplomat who strongly urged an anti-German policy in the years before World War I.

Crowe was the third son of Sir Joseph Crowe, an art historian. He was educated in Germany and France and, when he entered the British foreign service in 1885, could claim to be trilingual. His subsequent career was spent almost entirely at Whitehall, and he never held a diplomatic post abroad, his ambition being to become head of the Foreign Office. He entered the British Foreign Office in 1885.

In January 1907 Crowe wrote a “Memorandum on the present state of British relations with France and Germany,” directed to the foreign secretary Sir Edward Grey (afterward 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon), on whom it made a strong impression. In the communication Crowe stated that Germany aimed at the domination of Europe, that concessions would only increase the German appetite for power, and that the entente with France must not be abandoned. He also asserted that favourable Anglo-German relations would best be strengthened by a forceful defense by Great Britain of her foreign interests.

Crowe, who was knighted in 1911, became assistant undersecretary of state for foreign affairs in 1912. On July 25, 1914, he urged a show of force by the British Navy to forestall war; when World War I began a few days later, he induced a reluctant government to seize German vessels in British ports. In 1915, despite his patent hostility toward Germany, he was attacked by the British “yellow press” for his German connections (his mother and wife were born German subjects).

In 1920 Crowe was appointed permanent undersecretary of state for foreign affairs, a post that he held until his death. In 1919 he was one of the British plenipotentiaries at the Versailles Peace Conference, where his fluency in both French and German proved invaluable. In October 1924, in the absence of the prime minister (Ramsay MacDonald), he made the decision to publish the Zinoviev Letter (addressed to the Communist Party in Britain and advising on revolutionary procedures), which contributed to the defeat of the Labour Party in the parliamentary election shortly thereafter.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.