It was shortly after the successful delivery of the infant Joseph Austen Chamberlain that his mother, Harriet (nee Kenrick) died of complications arising from the birth. Austen's famous father,
Birmingham's Mayor Joseph Chamberlain, was so shaken by this event that for almost twenty-five years, he maintained a distance from his firstborn son of which Chamberlain only later became aware. He wrote in later years that:
:"It was one day in my 'teens that I spoke critically to him of a friend of his, left early a widower with an only child. 'He doesn't seem to care much for the boy,' I said, 'or to see much of him,' and my father, quick as always in a friend's defence, blurted out before he saw the implication of what he was saying, 'You must remember that his mother died when the boy was born,' and in a flash I saw for the first time, what he had so carefully concealed from me, that in my earliest years I had been to him the living embodiment of the first tragedy of his life."
The infant Austen was initially placed in the care of a maternal aunt, before Joseph Chamberlain married for the second time in 1868, to Florence Kenrick, a relative of his first wife. It was from this second marriage that Austen's half-brother and the future Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain was born (in 1869). Austen's stepmother died in turn in 1875 (prompting the further withdrawal of his father), and so the young boy's life revolved to a large degree around his female relatives, and most importantly his sister Beatrice. His brother Neville was also to be a close companion.
Austen Chamberlain was educated first at the prestigious
Rugby School, before passing on to
Trinity College, Cambridge, the largest of the constituent colleges of the
Cambridge University. Chamberlain made his first political address there in 1884 at a meeting of the Political Society of his university, and it would appear that from an early age his father had intended for politics to be his Austen's future path.
With this in mind, Austen was dispatched first to France, where he studied at the
Paris Institute of Political Studies (best known as the
Sciences Po). Whilst there, Austen developed a lasting admiration (some would say love) for the French people and their culture. For nine months, he was shown the brilliance of
Paris under the
Third Republic, and met and dined with the likes of
Georges Clemenceau and
Alexandre Ribot.
From Paris, Austen was sent to
Berlin for twelve months, there to imbibe the political culture of the other great European power,
Germany. Though in his letters home to Beatrice and Neville he showed an obvious preference for France and the lifestyle he had left behind there, Chamberlain undertook to learn German and learn from his experience in the capital of the
Kaiserreich. Among others, Austen met and dined with the “Iron Chancellor”
Otto von Bismarck, an experience which was to hold a special place in his heart for the duration of his life.
While attending the University of Berlin, Austen also developed a suspicion for the pronounced nationalism then arising in the German Empire. This was based upon his experience of the lecturing style of
Heinrich von Treitschke, who opened up to Austen "a new side of the German character - a narrow-minded, proud, intolerant Prussian chauvinism", the consequences of which he was later to ponder during the First World War, and the crises of the 1930s.
Though he was again upset to leave his newfound friends and return to the constraints of life under his father’s roof, Austen returned to the United Kingdom in 1888, lured largely by the prize of a parliamentary constituency.
He was first elected to parliament as a member of his father's own
Liberal Unionist Party in
1892, sitting for the seat of
East Worcestershire. Owing to the prominence of his father and the alliance between the anti-
Home Rule Liberal Unionists and
Conservative Party, Chamberlain was returned unopposed on 30th March, and at the first sitting of the new session, Austen walked up the floor of the house flanked by his father and his uncle
Richard.
Owing to the dissolution of parliament and the
August general election, Chamberlain was unable to make his maiden speech until April of 1893. This speech, when delivered, was acclaimed by the four-time Prime Minister
William Ewart Gladstone as “one of the best speeches which has been made”. That Chamberlain was speaking against Gladstone’s Second
Home Rule Bill does not seem to have dampened the enthusiasm of the Prime Minister, who responded by publicly congratulating both Austen and his father Joseph on such an excellent performance. This was highly significant, given the bad blood existing between Joseph Chamberlain and his former leader.
Appointed a junior Whip of the Liberal Unionists after the general election, Austen’s main role was to act as his father’s “standard bearer” in matters of policy. Upon the massive
Conservative and Unionist landslide win in the election of 1895, Chamberlain was appointed a
Civil Lord of the Admiralty, holding that post until 1900, when he became
Financial Secretary to the Treasury. In 1902, following the retirement of Prime Minister
Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury, Chamberlain was promoted to the position of
Postmaster General by the new premier, the Conservative
Arthur James Balfour.
In the wake of the struggle between his father and Balfour, Austen Chamberlain became
Chancellor of the Exchequer in
1903. Austen's appointment was largely a compromise solution to the bitter division of the two Unionist heavyweights, which threatened to split the coalition between supporters of Chamberlain's free-trade campaign and Balfour's more cautious advocacy of protectionism. While Austen supported his father’s programme, his influence within the cabinet was diminished following the departure of the senior Chamberlain to the back benches. Facing a resurgent Liberal opposition and the threat of an internal party split, Balfour eventually took the Unionists into opposition in December 1905, and in the ensuing rout in the
election of 1906, Austen Chamberlain found himself one of the few surviving Liberal Unionists in the
House of Commons.
Following his father's stroke and enforced retirement from active politics a few months later, Austen became the effective leader of the Tariff Reform campaign within the Unionist Party, and thus a contender for the eventual leadership of the party itself.