Ewen Henry Harvey Green (October 16, 1958 − September 16, 2006), known as
E.H.H. Green or
Ewen Green, was a British
historian famed for his work on 20th-century Britain and, in particular, the history of the 20th-century
Conservative Party.
Born in
Torbay and brought up in
Brixham, he was educated at
Churston Ferrers Grammar School where he developed his taste for history, which he went on to study at
University College London where he was awarded the Derby studentship for the best
first of 330 candidates. In 1980 he became a graduate student at
St John's College, Cambridge, working on politics in the Edwardian period, before taking up a junior research fellowship at
Brasenose College, Oxford in 1986.
In 1990, he went to
Reading University before, in 1995, returning to Oxford as a tutor and fellow of
Magdalen. For
the university, he became a Lecturer in modern history, rising to the position of Reader in 2004.
His first book,
The Crisis of Conservatism, focussed on the
Edwardian period and appeared in 1995. His second book,
Ideologies of Conservatism (2002), disclosed the unexpected long-term continuities in Conservative political thinking. His third,
Thatcher (2006), examined the party in recent decades.
He was diagnosed with
multiple sclerosis in 1999 but kept up his academic commitments for several years before taking early retirement. He died in 2006 at the age of 47.
Published works
- The Crisis of Conservatism: The Politics, Economics and Ideology of the Conservative......
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