Jim Callaghan was born on 27th March 1912 in Portsmouth, Hampshire, to
a Catholic father and Baptist mother. He was the only son and younger
of 2 children. His father was a Royal Navy Chief Petty Officer of Irish
ancestry, who died when Callaghan was aged 9. His father died when he
was 9, plunging the family into poverty. They received no pension until
Labour came into office in 1931 and paid the Callaghans a weekly
pension of 10 shillings (then worth about $2).
He had an unspectacular education at Portsmouth Northern Secondary
School, and left at 16 to work as a clerk for the Inland Revenue and
became involved with the union (Staff Federation). He later met Harold
Laski, the Chair of the Labour Party's National Executive Committee.
Laski encouraged him to stand for Parliament. Callaghan served in the
Royal Navy Patrol Service in World War II from 1943, but while on leave
he was able to get selected as a Parliamentary candidate for Cardiff
South, later Cardiff South East. He won the seat in the 1945 UK general
election. He rose steadily through the party in Opposition, and stood
for the leadership after Gaitskell's death in 1963.
In 1964 as Chancellor of the Exchequer, he decided not to devalue the
pound, which proved to be a disastrous decision. He was forced to do so
three years later and felt obliged to resign as Chancellor and became
Home Secretary, where he was able to partially restore his reputation.
During this time there was worsening violence in Northern Ireland and
in 1969 he sent troops to the province, initially to protect the
Catholic minority.
In Opposition Callaghan became Shadow Foreign Secretary, and in
government after 1974 it was his job to renegotiate the terms of
Britains EC membership. When
Harold Wilson resigned unexpectedly, Callaghan
was not the favourite to win the leadership, being the oldest candidate
at 64. However, he was the least divisive candidate, and won the vote.
He was Prime Minister from 1976 to 1979. As a PM he presided over a
sterling crisis, which led to negotiations with the IMF for a rescue
package. However, problems became more difficult when Labour lost its
overall small majority in 1977, following a succession of by-election
defeats. They became dependent on the support of the Liberals to
survive. However, Callaghan persevered in office even when this pact
broke down.
During the 'Winter of Discontent' in 1978, industrial action over pay
policy severely damaged the governments authority. Following a loss of
a confidence motion on 28 March 1979 by just one vote, Callaghan was
obliged to hold a general election, which was won by
Margaret Thatcher 's
Conservative Party. He resigned as leader of the Labour party in
September 1980, shortly after the 1980 party conference.
In 1983, he became Father of the House as the longest continuously
serving member of the Commons and one of only two survivors of the 1945
general election. The other one was
Michael Foot , who, however, had been
out of the House from 1955 to 1960. Callaghan remained an MP until the
1987 general election when he retired after forty-two years as a member
of the Commons. The same year, he was elevated to the House of Lords as
Baron Callaghan of Cardiff.
In 1988 his wife Audrey spotted a letter to a newspaper which pointed
out that the copyright of Peter Pan was about to expire. Callaghan
moved an amendment to the Copyright Bill then under consideration in
the Lords to extend it permanently, and this was accepted by the
government. (Royalties from Peter Pan go to the Great Ormond Street
Children's Hospital)
He was married for 67 years to Audrey Elizabeth Moulton. They had a son
and two daughters. Margaret, born in 1940, became Baroness Jay of
Paddington and was Leader of the House of Lords from 1998 to 2001.
Julia was born in 1943 and Michael in 1946.
He died at his farm in Ringmer, East Sussex on 26 March 2005 on the eve
of his 93rd birthday and just 11 days after the death of his wife
Audrey.