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Seán Lester

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seán Lester
Secretary-General of the League of Nations
In office
31 August 1940 – 18 April 1946
Preceded byJoseph Avenol
Succeeded byTrygve Lie (as Secretary-General of the United Nations)
Deputy Secretary-General of the League of Nations
In office
18 February 1937 – 26 July 1940
Secretary-GeneralJoseph Avenol
Preceded byPablo de Azcárate
Succeeded byFrancis Paul Walters
Personal details
Born
John Ernest Lester

(1888-09-28)28 September 1888
Carrickfergus, Ireland
Died13 June 1959(1959-06-13) (aged 70)
Galway, Ireland
Spouse
Elizabeth Tyrrell
(m. 1920)
Children3
ProfessionJournalist

Seán Lester (28 September 1888 – 13 June 1959) was an Irish diplomat who was the last secretary-general of the League of Nations from 31 August 1940 to 18 April 1946.

Early life

[edit]

He was born in County Antrim as John Ernest Lester, the son of a Protestant grocer Robert Lester and his wife, the former Henrietta Ritchie. Although the town of Carrickfergus, where he was born and raised, was strongly Unionist, he joined the Gaelic League as a youth and was won over to the cause of Irish nationalism.[1] As a young man, he joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood. He worked as a journalist for the North Down Herald and a number of other northern papers before he moved to Dublin, where he found a job at the Freeman's Journal. By 1919, he had risen to become its news editor.

After the Irish War of Independence, a number of his friends joined the new government of the Irish Free State. Lester was offered and accepted the position as director of publicity.

He married Elizabeth Ruth Tyrrell in 1920 by whom he had three daughters.[1]

Diplomatic career

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In 1923, he joined Ireland's Department of External Affairs. He was sent to Geneva in 1929 to replace Michael MacWhite as Ireland's Permanent Delegate to the League of Nations. In 1930, he succeeded in organising Ireland's election to the Council (or executive body) of the League of Nations for a three year term. Lester often represented Ireland at Council meetings and stood in for the Minister for External Affairs. He became increasingly involved in the work of the League, particularly in its attempts to bring a resolution to two wars in South America. His work brought him to the attention of the League Secretariat and began his transformation from national to international civil servant.

When Peru and Colombia had a dispute over a town in the headwaters of the Amazon, Lester presided over the committee that found an equitable solution.[1] He also presided over the less-successful committee when Bolivia and Paraguay went to war over the Gran Chaco.[1]

In 1933, Lester was seconded to the League's Secretariat and sent to Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland), as the League of Nations' High Commissioner from 1934 to 1937. The Free City of Danzig was the scene of an emerging international crisis between Nazi Germany and the international community over the issue of the Polish Corridor and the Free City's relationship with the Third Reich. Lester repeatedly protested to the German government over its persecution and discrimination of Jews and warned the League of the looming disaster for Europe. He was boycotted by the representatives of the German Reich and the representatives of the Nazi Party in Danzig.[2]

In August 2010, a room in the Gdansk City Hall, the building that had been Lester's residence during his stay, was renamed by Mayor Paweł Adamowicz as the Seán Lester Room.[3]

League of Nations

[edit]

Lester returned to Geneva in 1937 to become Deputy Secretary General of the League of Nations. In 1940, he became Secretary General of the body (he became the League's leader a year after the beginning of World War II which showed that the League had failed its primary purpose). The League had only 100 employees, including guards and janitors, out of the original 700.

Lester remained in Geneva throughout the war and kept the League's technical and humanitarian programs in limited operation for the duration of the war. In 1946, he oversaw the League's closure and turned over the League's assets and functions to the newly-established United Nations.

Later years

[edit]

Lester was given the Woodrow Wilson Award in 1945 and a doctorate of the National University of Ireland in 1948.

Despite rumours that he would be prepared to stand for election as President of Ireland, Lester sought no permanent office and retired to Recess, County Galway, in the west of Ireland, where he died in 1959. In its obituary, The Times described Lester as an "international conciliator and courageous friend of refugees".

His granddaughter Susan Denham was Chief Justice of Ireland for the Supreme Court of Ireland from 2011 to 2017.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d The Times, (Obituary) 15 June 1959[full citation needed]
  2. ^ Boylan, Henry (1998). A Dictionary of Irish Biography, 3rd Edition. Dublin: Gill and MacMillan. p. 222. ISBN 0-7171-2945-4.
  3. ^ Derek Scally, Irish Times, 27 August 2010

Biographies

[edit]
  • Stephen Ashworth Barcroft: The international civil servant: the League of Nations career of Sean Lester, 1929–1947; Dublin 1973
  • Douglas Gageby: The last secretary general: Sean Lester and the League of Nations; Dublin 1999; ISBN 1-86059-108-6
  • Arthur W. Rovine: The first fifty years: the secretary-general in world politics 1920–1970; Leyden 1970; ISBN 90-218-9190-5
  • Michael Kennedy: Ireland and the League of Nations 1919–1946: politics, diplomacy and international relations; Dublin 1996
  • Paul McNamara: Sean Lester, Poland and the Nazi Takeover of Danzig; Irish Academic Press Ltd 2008; ISBN 0-7165-2969-6
[edit]
Positions in intergovernmental organisations
Preceded by Secretary-General of the League of Nations
1940–1946
Succeeded byas acting United Nations Secretary-General