Esmond Wright

English historian
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroEnglish historian
PlacesUnited Kingdom Great Britain England
wasPolitician Historian
Work fieldSocial science Politics
Gender
Male
Birth5 November 1915
Death9 August 2003 (aged 87 years)
The details

Biography

Esmond Wright (5 November 1915, Newcastle upon Tyne – 9 August 2003, Masham, North Yorkshire) was an English historian of the United States, Director of the Institute of United States Studies at the University of London from 1971 to 1983, a television personality, author, and a Conservative politician.
Wright had a grammar school education in Newcastle upon Tyne, before winning an open scholarship to Durham University and, in 1938, a Commonwealth Fund Fellowship to the University of Virginia. He was awarded the Benjamin Franklin Medal in 1988. In a 1967 by-election, he was returned as a Conservative Member of Parliament for the previously Labour-held seat of Glasgow Pollok. He was defeated by Labour's James White in the 1970 General Election.

Works

Wright's publications include

  • Fabric of Freedom, 1763-1800, Hill and Wang, New York 1961.
  • History of the World. The Last Five Hundred Years, editor, Bonaza Books, New York 1981.
  • The Fire of Liberty, editor, The Folio Society, London 1983.
  • Franklin of Philadelphia, Harvard University Press, 1986.

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