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Sulgrave Manor
Manor Road
Sulgrave
Nr. Banbury
Oxfordshire
OX17 2SD
United Kingdom
+44 (0)1295 760205
Charity No. 1003839
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The Watson Chair Lectures


ORIGINS OF THE WATSON CHAIR LECTURES

Nearly two centuries ago, in 1814, peace was established between the United States and Britain, after a period of variable turbulence beginning with the Revolution.

A Watson Chair Brochure
 

Nearly a century ago, 1914 was seen by men and women of influence on both sides of the Atlantic, as an occasion to celebrate a hundred years of lasting peace between, arguably, the two most powerful nations of the time. From this initiative, came:

a statue of George Washington in Trafalgar Square
the purchase and refurbishment of the ancestral home of the Washington family, Sulgrave Manor opened to the public in 1921.
a lecture series, known as the Watson Chair, held regularly from 1921 but intermittently after World War II with the last in 1995.

Today both countries have changed, becoming multi-ethnic, diverse societies with a wider range of links and more complex issues to confront within the context of their relationship. The links between the two nations are manifested now in a range of organisations and associations, the majority of which have a political, business or academic focus.

The Sulgrave Manor Board determined to re-launch the Watson Chair lectures as an annual focus for the

"promotion of better knowledge and understanding of Anglo-American relations, past, present and future"

amongst a wider public than generally have access to the academic consideration of these issues. The lectures have been delivered in the past at leading universities (Oxford, London), a City livery hall, at RIBA and at the American Embassy. From their institution in 1921 until 1939, courses of generally six lectures were given annually, alternately by eminent Americans and Britons, including politicians, university presidents and professors, concluding with the architect, Frank Lloyd Wright. The series resumed after World War II with Walter Lippmann the well respected journalist. The series became quite academic during the period 1965-87 when it was hosted by the University of Leicester, since when only one lecture has been given which was by Daniel Boorstin on George Washington himself.

The first lecture in the new series was held on November 18th, 2005 at Sulgrave Manor with the eminent economist, journalist and historian, Peter Jay speaking on the US, UK and Europe today. Peter Jay described his Watson Chair Lecture as an exploration of "what the development of the European Union as a political identity aiming to exercise political power and influence on the global stage, together with a changing political culture in the USA, should imply and does imply for British foreign policy, for US European policy and for British engagement in Europe." A transcript of the lecture "USE (United States of Europe) Never, USA Ever" is available to purchase.