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DRUMMOND, Sir James Eric, British diplomat and first Secretary-General of the
League of Nations 1919-1933, was born 17 August 1876 in Fulford, North Yorkshire
and passed away 15 December 1951 in Rogate, West Sussex, United Kingdom. He was
the son of James David Drummond, army officer, and Margaret Smythe. On 20 April
1904 he married Angela Mary Constable Maxwell. They had three daughters and one
son.
Source:
www.indiana.edu/~librcsd/nt/db.cgi?db=ig&do=search_results&details=2&ID=822&ID-opt
Drummond was born in Yorkshire, England, but belonged to an old Scottish aristocratic
family. Yet, in his immediate family there was relatively little wealth. He was the eldest of
three children and the only son, but also had two half-sisters and one half-brother from his
father’s first marriage. He was educated at Bedford Grammar School and graduated from
Eton College in 1895, where he learned French and was captain of the Oppidans (students
who had distinguished themselves academically). Drummond had no university training, but
after his graduation he spent a year travelling in Europe and studying languages, primarily in
Germany. Although raised in a Protestant family, he converted to Roman Catholicism in
1903 in order to marry Mary Maxwell, who was also from an old Scottish family, but Roman
Catholic. He entered the Foreign Office in 1900 as a clerk. His work was considered
outstanding and, beginning in 1906, his career slowly and steadily progressed through a
series of successful private secretaryships. Starting out as secretary to the Under-Secretaries
at the Foreign Office, Edmond Fitzmaurice (1906-1908) and Thomas M. Wood (1908-1910),
he went on to become private secretary to Prime Minister Herbert Asquith (1912-1915) and
Foreign Secretaries Edward Grey (1915-1916) and Arthur J. Balfour (1916-1918). In 1917 he
accompanied Balfour on his mission to the United States (US), during which President
Woodrow Wilson broached the idea of the League of Nations to Balfour. Drummond and
Colonel Edward M. House, who had met in 1915 and understood each other well, drafted a
memorandum on the postwar situation in Europe for Balfour and Wilson, which came to be
known as the House-Drummond memorandum.
In early 1919 Drummond was attached to the British delegation to the Paris Peace
Conference after the First World War, which drafted the League of Nations’ Covenant. The
initial British draft plan, which was supported by the American delegation, suggested that the
office-holder, then called Chancellor, should be a prominent statesman with the power to take
political initiatives and the willingness to engage with international criticism. Therefore, the
office was first offered to Greek Prime Minister Elftherios Venizelo, then to Czechoslovakian
President Tomas Masaryk, who both turned down the offer. With no other candidates
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available to play the political role initially envisaged, the nature of the office was
reconsidered and drafters of the Covenant decided that the position, now called Secretary-
General, should be one of a non-political functionary patterned along the lines of a senior
government civil servant. The choice first fell on Maurice Hankey, Secretary to the Cabinet,
the Committee of Imperial Defence and the Imperial War Cabinet, and it was only when
Hankey declined the offer that Drummond, readily available at the Peace Conference and a
trained and experienced diplomat, was offered the position. As a diplomat, Drummond was
highly regarded by British and American decision makers who knew him through his
wartime work. During the Peace Conference his familiarity with procedure and grasp of
detail, combined with a marked detachment and trustworthiness, had also attracted attention
and earned him a strong reputation. Little is known for certain about Drummond’s personal
motives for accepting the position. He hesitated to take up office, as he feared the enormous
task of organizing the League’s Secretariat. However, it seems that the prestige of the
appointment in combination with a genuine interest in the idea of a League of Nations, which
had been sparked by meetings with Wilson in 1917, were key factors in his decision.
Arguably, difficulties advancing in the Foreign Office hierarchy also played a role for his
new choice of career.
Drummond was appointed Secretary-General of the League of Nations on 28 April
1919. His appointment was part of a broader arrangement between the United Kingdom (UK)
and France, under which a balance was established between British and French representation
in the direction of the League and the International Labour Organization (ILO), also founded
in 1919. Thus, Frenchman Albert Thomas became ILO Director, supported by a British
deputy, while Frenchman Jean Monnet was made Drummond’s deputy. Despite these
balancing mechanisms, the fact that the new League Secretary-General was an influential and
well-connected British civil servant became the source of continuous debate and suspicion
among the member states of the new organization. The formal basis for Drummond’s
Secretary-Generalship was limited. Drummond did not hold any independent right to bring
up for political discussion matters that might threaten the maintenance of international peace
and security. However, he also faced few limitations and specifications as to the nature of the
new international office and was left with much room for interpretation and initiative. The
only formal guidelines directing his work were Article 6 of the Covenant, which stated that
he was obliged to act in his capacity as Secretary-General ‘at all meetings of the Assembly
and of the Council’, and Article 7, which granted him and other staff in the Secretariat
diplomatic privileges and immunities. With no single political head in situ to whom he was
responsible, permanent missions at Geneva still in their infancy and infrequent meetings of
the Council and the Assembly (the Council met three to four times a year; the Assembly
convened for a month once a year), Drummond was left with considerable scope for action.
However, in developing his new role he approached the League in a way typical of the
British foreign policy elite, attributing paramount importance to the great powers in
international politics. He believed that the source of the League’s power and legitimacy lay
squarely with its member states, the great powers in particular, and he had quite moderate
expectations for the organization. He did not see it as his job to realize Wilson’s far reaching
visions of world peace, but rather aimed to develop a League of Nations that could serve as a
useful framework for negotiation, mediation and information exchange.
In keeping with this approach, Drummond’s key priorities as Secretary-General
were to create cordial relations and trust with great powers inside the League and to expand
the League’s membership to include major powers outside the League. Within the
organization Drummond used a combination of tactful and discrete personal diplomacy
towards national delegates in Geneva and their home governments and the strategic
appointments of high-ranking League officials to increase interactions and build trust with the
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UK, France and Italy. Though generally respectful of all member states, it was evident that
cooperation with the British Foreign Office was particularly close. As Drummond’s
biographer, James Barros (1979: 130-131), observed, the Foreign Office was ‘willing within
certain limits to work in co-operation with the world organization and saw in the League
system certain advantages in helping implement British foreign policy desires and maintain
peace. These attitudes in turn helped Drummond immeasurably in executing his own task in
Geneva’. Drummond strongly supported US membership in the League since he believed this
was paramount not only to the effectiveness of the organization’s collective security system,
but would also draw Latin American states closer to the organization and ease cooperation
with China. When it became apparent that the US would not be joining the new organization,
Drummond worked hard to foster close relations with the US, not least in the League’s
technical work. Drummond considered US non-membership to be the League’s fatal
shortcoming, as he phrased it in an article in The Spectator (1945: 6): ‘The absence of the
United States left the League maimed from its inception. Had America been, as was
anticipated, an original member of the League the whole course of history might – and in my
opinion would – have been completely different’. Drummond’s view of Socialist Russia was
more ambivalent. He believed that it was necessary to recognize the new Communist regime
in order to handle the many unresolved political issues after the First World War and worked
to build constructive relations with Russia, later the Soviet Union. Personally, however, he
was strongly anti-Communist and believed the totalitarian threat from the left to be far more
serious than that from rightwing movements. Drummond felt that Germany should
unambiguously become a League member. Even though German admission was negotiated
outside the League, Drummond contributed to smoothing Germany’s entrance by providing
information, comments and warnings during the negotiations and by doing what he could to
accommodate Germany in its wishes for representation in the Council and the Secretariat.
In the early 1920s Drummond’s main focus was on navigating the many complicated
and politically charged problems left unresolved by the war and the peace treaties. During the
Saar, Danzig, Vilna and Teschen conflicts he attempted to secure a minor, but constructive,
role for the League by insisting on the organization’s authority to intervene in the problems
and to appoint local investigative and administrative commissions and select chairmen and, in
the case of Danzig, High Commissioners. Even if his attempts were not very successful, he
managed to establish the League as an entity separate from the Allies, capable of setting its
own course. Drummond also had some early accomplishments. In 1920 he succeeded in
providing the Norwegian explorer Fridtjof Nansen with some resources for his work on the
repatriation of German and Russian prisoners of war. This work took on a permanent
character when the Council instituted its High Commission for Refugees, headed by Nansen,
in 1921. In 1921 Drummond also played an active role in helping solve what was a
potentially dangerous dispute between Sweden and Finland over the Åland Islands. He had
similar successes in conflicts such as the Costa Rican-Panamanian dispute in 1921, the
Greek-Bulgarian border incident in 1925 and the Chaco dispute between Bolivia and
Paraguay in 1928. In all of these cases it became evident that Drummond had actual authority
to have important questions put on the Council’s political agenda. Overall, Drummond
adopted a restrained, evolutionary approach to his work, gradually defining, demonstrating
and expanding the League’s authority, much like ‘a winter skater: carefully testing the ice
here and there always aware that somewhere further on the ice is dangerously thin’ (Barros
1979: 50).
A key characteristic of Drummond’s political activities as Secretary-General was
that he was not promoting a particular, preconceived political course, but rather was focused
on helping governments broker political compromise and continuously adjusted his course to
find common solutions.
In so doing, he worked with tact and discretion and circulated ideas,
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advice, recommendations, schemes and formulas through confidential talks with government
officials or indirectly through delegates, members of the Secretariat or governments not
directly involved but interested in the peaceful settlement of a particular dispute. Unlike ILO
Director Thomas, Drummond did not place much importance in international public opinion,
with the result that his activities were largely invisible. This discretion and careful use of the
office increased his reputation among statesmen and by the middle and last years of his
tenure, as seen for instance in the Manchurian crisis of 1931, he could undertake initiatives
and actions that would have been considered unacceptable in the early 1920s, systematically
monitoring the rising tensions in China and proactively developing plans for how to deal with
the crisis from as early as 1927. However, he was unable to end the Japanese invasion. By the
time his tenure ended in 1933, Drummond had become the confidant of most of the leading
statesmen of the day and had ‘firmly established the idea of an international civil service and
made the Secretary-Generalship a vital international office’ (Lloyd 2011). Throughout his
tenure Drummond’s main focus was on European affairs. This was perhaps inevitable, given
that Europe had been the principal battleground of the First World War and was the scene of
a multitude of postwar problems. He was also better prepared for his role in the European
setting than, for instance, in Latin America, with which his contacts remained peripheral,
notwithstanding the League’s role in some Latin American conflicts.
Overall, Drummond focused his own personal activities on the League’s ‘high-
politics’, dealing with diplomatic crises and conflict resolution, while leaving substantial
room for independent policy development in areas such as the economy, finance, health and
the mandate system to other League bodies and sections of the Secretariat. Just as the
Secretary-General’s political role was vaguely defined in the Covenant, guidelines for the
organization and running of the League’s Secretariat were largely absent. Article 6 stated that
the Secretary-General held the authority to appoint secretaries and Secretariat staff with the
approval of the Council. As the administrative head of the Secretariat, Drummond was skilful
and efficient. Starting with no precedents to build on, he swiftly created a smooth and
efficient administration of eventually 700 people from around 40 countries. Similar to his
political work, he took a gradualist, pragmatic approach in this respect. In 1919 he laid out a
skeleton organization that mirrored all tasks entrusted to the League by the Covenant as well
as responsibilities placed on the League by other treaties. He then singled out the issues
requiring early action or attention and focused on setting up services in these areas. From
then on he let the new organization grow gradually as further needs arose, hiring staff when
there was documented demand. The creation of the League’s Secretariat and the development
of its activities were driven forward by a small group of dedicated liberal internationalists and
statesmen with strong interest in the League. Outside the League, Drummond could draw
support from people such as House and Raymond B. Fosdick in the US, Robert Cecil and
Balfour in the UK and later Gustav Stresemann of Germany, Aristide Briand of France and
Edvard Bene
š of Czechoslovakia
.
Within the League, Drummond quickly set up a small team of young, capable men
and women who helped him develop the new organization, among them Monnet (Deputy
Secretary-General from 1920 to 1923), Ludwik Rajchman (Director of the League’s Health
Organization) and Rachel Crowdy (Head of the Social Affairs Section). Drummond based the
Secretariat’s basic infrastructure on the one he knew from the Foreign Office. However, he
was well aware that the League Secretariat could never be analogous to the non-political
Weberian bureaucracy of national government. He believed that the Secretariat needed to
have permeable boundaries and that a steady flow of ideas, information and people between
the major powers and the new bureaucratic structure was a prerequisite for the new
Secretariat’s legitimacy and capacity to act. Ensuring this while maintaining core principles
of impartiality and a professional, meritocratic civil service that all member states would trust
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was a key challenge. Drummond dealt with this dilemma primarily by distinguishing between
what might be termed ‘political’ and ‘administrative’ positions in the Secretariat, quietly
earmarking most of the higher and more important positions for nationals of major states.
These senior Secretariat officials were expected to stay in continuous contact with their home
governments and national public opinions while similar activities were strongly discouraged
in the Secretariat’s lower echelons, where strict impartiality, confidentiality and
independence from national prejudice was expected. Drummond selected his candidates for
the Secretariat in close cooperation with member states. The more powerful the state, the
greater the deference shown in consulting with the state and accepting and acting upon that
state’s advice and recommendations for nominations.
This focus on the nationality principle in the Secretariat’s organization was further
accentuated by the fact that under secretaries-general and other high-ranking Secretariat
officials tended to recruit staff of their own nationality, thereby creating national islands
within the organization. This also applied to Drummond, whose immediate assistants were
British or from the Dominions. As a consequence, small states and non-European member
states were markedly underrepresented among the League’s officials. As leader of the
Secretariat, Drummond was open-minded and he knew how to delegate, giving much latitude
to his section directors. To these higher officials he was available for consultation and
guidance and he actively involved them in policy development, as can be seen in the minutes
of the Directors’ Meetings. By contrast, he was considered aloof and unapproachable by the
Secretariat’s lower echelons. His wife publicly assisted him in his manifold social duties as
Secretary-General in Geneva, which was rapidly becoming an international hub for
diplomacy and transnational policy making. While Drummond worked long hours, he also
enjoyed sports activities such as tennis, golf and bridge. Drummond’s term as Secretary-
General had no legal time limit. However, in 1932 he chose to resign, given the strain of the
work over a long time period, and his term ended on 30 June 1933. When he resigned, he
tried (but failed) to prevent Deputy Secretary-General Joseph Avenol from succeeding him as
Secretary-General. He believed Avenol did not have the personal qualities required for the
post and also feared that a French candidate would be opposed by Germany and Italy. When
evaluating Drummond’s inclination to prioritize the major powers and the nationality
principle in organizing the League, it is worth keeping in mind how novel the idea of an
international civil service was at the time. When the League was created in 1919, alternative
plans were seriously discussed in which the League’s secretarial work was to be done by
national delegations rather than a joint staff. Creating an international administration where
staff acted on the instructions of the Secretary-General and on behalf of the organization, as
defended by Drummond at the time, was in itself a major achievement. Also, during
Drummond’s tenure, a gradual shift took place in which the top ranks of the Secretariat were
increasingly seen as shifting away from national loyalties and becoming active proponents for
League policies. This became the cause of some concern and criticism, as witnessed most
prominently in the report of the so-called Committee of Thirteen in 1930 (Committee of
Enquiry on the Organisation of the Secretariat, the International Labour Office and the
Registry of the Permanent Court of International Justice, Report of the Committee, League of
Nations Document A.16.1930; also Ranshofen-Wertheimer 1945: 25-31).
On his return to the Foreign Office in London in 1933 Drummond wished to become
British ambassador to the US. This, however, was rejected by Prime Minister Ramsay
MacDonald, who also turned him down for the post as permanent Under Secretary of the
Foreign Office and the ambassadorship to France, allegedly all because of old grudges held
against Drummond for converting to Roman Catholicism when marrying. Instead,
Drummond became ambassador to Italy in October 1933. Drummond’s ambassadorship has
been the object of some debate due to his conciliatory approach towards Benito Mussolini’s
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regime in Italy. He was sceptical of the League’s sanctions after the Italian invasion of
Abyssinia in 1935 and after Abyssinia’s annexation in 1936 he argued for the promotion of
positive British-Italian relations as witnessed in the 1938 Anglo-Italian agreement. He was on
good terms with Mussolini and a personal friend of Italian Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano.
While his engagement with the Fascist regime was, as Lorna Lloyd (2011) puts it, ‘a
thankless and in retrospect futile endeavour’, it was also in line with, and appreciated by, the
government in London. Viewed against the backdrop of his work as Secretary-General of the
League, it also was in harmony with his fundamental ideas about the importance and rights of
the great powers and the role and value of mediation over coercive measures in international
politics. He held his ambassador post until April 1939 when he returned to the UK, where he
was appointed to the Publicity Department of the British Foreign Office and then made chief
advisor to the Ministry of Information (until July 1940). In 1941 he entered the House of
Lords as a representative peer of Scotland (until his death), becoming the deputy leader of the
Liberal Party in 1946. In 1944 Drummond was appointed chairman of the party’s committee
to study the plans for the United Nations (UN) as laid down in the Dumbarton Oaks
proposals. He supported the UN Charter’s strengthening of the political role of the Secretary-
General, while at the same time arguing that the previous entanglement of the office and
major member states on the office now had to end. He believed that the UN Secretary-
General should preferably come from a small state and ‘must in no case be open to pressure
from any Government, least of all his own’ (cited in Fosdick 1972: 46). Drummond, the
seventh Earl of Perth, had succeeded to the earldom on 20 August 1937, following the death
of his half-brother William Huntly Drummond. This made him Chief of the Clan Drummond.
His son John David succeeded him in his titles when he died of cancer in his home, Funing
House, in Rogate, Sussex in December 1951.
There is widespread consensus among historians that Drummond was a skilful
administrative head of the League of Nations and a resourceful, cautious and discreet
diplomatic representative of the organization, whose approach contrasted with the more open
approach of his ILO contemporary Thomas. Views on the political impact and meaning of his
office, however, vary. Drummond’s main biographer, Barros (1979), was the first to
challenge the predominant view in early League historiography that Drummond had been a
shy and passive Secretary-General. While stressing the severe structural constraints of
interwar European politics, under which Drummond operated and which rendered most of his
political initiatives inefficient, Barros also shows Drummond to be an active and skilled
diplomatic operator. Lloyd (2011) draws an even more positive picture, focusing mainly on
the intentions and qualities of Drummond’s activities as Secretary-General, while leaving
aside the question of political impact. In doing so, Lloyd restates an interpretation presented
by Drummond’s close friend Fosdick in 1972. Mark Mazower (2013) has taken an alternative
approach to Drummond’s tenure, shifting focus away from his impact on European interwar
politics and presenting him as the founder of the first major international public service, thus
stressing the important constitutive effects he and other prominent League officials had on
twentieth-century international public administration.
ARCHIVES: Drummond’s papers that remained in Geneva were destroyed in 1940, but the
few files he took with him and returned later are in the League of Nations’ Archives in
Geneva, Switzerland, see
http://biblio-archive.unog.ch/detail.aspx?id=32548
.
PUBLICATIONS: Staff of Secretariat, Memorandum by the Secretary-General, Geneva
1919 (Document du Conseil, Société des Nations, 6-29/1083/1083); ‘Your Book’: Short
Essays on Various Subjects, London 1920; The Aims of the League of Nations, London 1929;
‘Foreword’ in Ten Years of World Co-operation, London 1930, v-vii (edited by the League of
Nations’ Secretariat); ‘The Secretariat of the League of Nations’ in Public Administration,
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9/2, April 1931, 228-235; The League of Nations, London 1933 (Broadcast National Lectures
nr. 12); The International Secretariat of the Future: Lessons from Experience by a Group of
Former Officials of the League of Nations, London 1944 (chaired the Group as The Earl of
Perth); Germany after the War: Proposals of a Committee, London 1944 (under Drummond’s
chairmanship); The Organisation of Peace and the Dumbarton Oaks Proposals, London
1945; ‘San Francisco Hopes’ in The Spectator, nr. 6094, 12 April 1945, 6 (as The Earl of
Perth).
LITERATURE: E. Ranshofen-Wertheimer, The International Secretariat: A Great
Experiment in International Administration, Washington DC 1945; The Times, 17 December
1951; The Guardian, 17 December 1951; F.P. Walters, A History of the League of Nations,
Westport 1952; S.M. Schwebel, The Secretary-General of the United Nations: His Political
Powers and Practices, Cambridge, MA 1952; F. Gilbert, ‘Two British Ambassadors: Perth
and Henderson’ in G.A. Craig and F. Gilbert (Eds), The Diplomats 1919-1939, Princeton
1953 (reprinted 1994), 537-554; J.A. Salter, Memoirs of a Public Servant, London 1961;
A.W. Rovine: The First Fifty Years: The Secretary-General in World Politics 1920-1970,
Leyden 1970, 17-103; D.Th. Rotunda, The Rome Embassy of Sir Eric Drummond, 16
th
Earl
of Perth, 1933-1939, London 1972 (Thesis University of London); P.D. Mageli, ‘Drummond,
James Eric’ in W.F. Kuehl (Ed.), Biographical Dictionary of Internationalists, Westport
1983, 218-220; J. Barros, Office Without Power: Secretary-General Sir Eric Drummond
1919-1933, Oxford 1979; R.B. Fosdick, The League and the United Nations after Fifty
Years: The Six Secretaries-General, Newton 1972, 19-46; J. Barros, ‘The Role of Sir Eric
Drummond’ in The League of Nations in Retrospect: Proceedings of the Symposium, Berlin
1983, 31-41; F. Moorhouse, Grand Days, Sydney 1993 (novel); P. van den Dungen, ‘Sir Eric
Drummond: The First International Civil Servant’ in
The League of Nations 1920-1946:
Organization and Accomplishments: A Retrospective of the First Organization for the
Establishment of World Peace, New York and Geneva 1996, 30-33;
A.J.P. Gelardi, Sir Eric
Drummond, Britain’s Ambassador to Italy, and British Foreign Policy during the Italo-
Abyssinian Crisis of 1935-1936, n.pl. 1998 (Master Thesis Simon Fraser University, Canada);
L. Lloyd, ‘Drummond, (James) Eric, seventh earl of Perth (1876-1951)’ in Oxford Dictionary
of National Biography, Oxford 2004, online edition 2011, available at
www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/32902
; P. Clavin, Securing the World Economy: The
Reinvention of the League of Nations, 1920-1946, Oxford 2013; M. Mazower, Governing the
World: The History of an Idea, 1815 to Present, London 2013; S. Saré, The League of
Nations and the Debate on Disarmament (1918-1919), Rome 2013; K. Dykmann, ‘How
International Was the Secretariat of the League of Nations?’ in International History Review,
37/4, 2015, 721-744; S. Pedersen, The Guardians: The League of Nations and the Crisis of
Empire, Oxford 2015.
Karen Gram-Skjoldager
Version 25 January 2017 (title added)
How To Cite This IO BIO Entry?
Karen Gram-Skjoldager, ‘Drummond, Sir James Eric’ in IO BIO, Biographical Dictionary of
Secretaries-General of International Organizations, Edited by Bob Reinalda, Kent J. Kille and Jaci
Eisenberg,
www.ru.nl/fm/iobio
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