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Horace Wilson (civil servant) : ウィキペディア英語版
Horace Wilson (civil servant)

Sir Horace John Wilson (1882 – 1972) was a British top government official who had a key role in the appeasement-oriented ministry of Neville Chamberlain just prior to World War II.
==Career==
Wilson was born and educated in Bournemouth. He joined the British Civil Service in 1898, as a boy clerk, and attended the London School of Economics as a night student.
He rose rapidly through the Civil Service, serving in the Patent Office, War Office, and the Board of Trade. At the Board of Trade he became particularly involved in industrial relations, and moved to the Ministry of Labour in 1916. He was made CBE in 1918, CB in 1920, KCB in 1924, GCMG in 1933, and finally GCB in 1937.〔(Wilson, Sir Horace John (1882–1972), civil servant ). Rodney Lowe, in ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''〕
His highest posts included:
* Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Labour, 1921-1930
* Chief Industrial Adviser to the Government, 1930-1939
* Seconded for special service with Stanley Baldwin, 1935-1937
* Seconded for special service with Neville Chamberlain, 1937-1940 (during this period he had a room at 10 Downing Street)
* Permanent Secretary of the Treasury and Head of the Home Civil Service, 1939-1942
In late September 1938, during the "Sudetenland crisis", Chamberlain sent Wilson as emissary to German leader Adolf Hitler. Wilson was charged with communicating to Hitler that the British Cabinet, France, and Czechoslovakia rejected Hitler's demands to annex the largely ethnic-German Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia. In the course of speaking with Hitler, it was Wilson who also delivered the most significant diplomatic communication between Germany and Britain since the close of World War I: that should Germany invade Czechoslovakia and France declare war against Germany, Britain would go to war against Germany alongside France. However, Britain did not stick to this resolute stance, and instead accepted the break-up of Czechoslovakia under the Munich Agreement, damaging the historical reputation of both Chamberlain and Wilson.
British journalist Leonard Mosley interviewed Wilson among numerous others for the 1969 book ''On Borrowed Time'', about the months leading up to the outbreak of World War II. Wilson acknowledged having felt out of his depth in dealing with Nazi Germany, and Mosley was critical of Wilson's role.
It has also been (reported ) that he showed little interest in the fate of Germany's Jews during the negotiations with Hitler. Speaking to another journalist, Colin Cross, in 1968 - that is, 23 years after the liberation of Auschwitz - Wilson, by then well into his eighties, is quoted as saying that he understood Hitler's feelings about the Jews. "Have you ever met a Jew you liked?" he asked Cross.

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