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Oliver Franks, Baron Franks

Oliver Shewell Franks, Baron Franks,, was an English civil servant and philosopher who has been described as 'one of the founders of the postwar world'.

Early life
Franks was educated at Bristol Grammar School and Queen's College, Oxford. He became an Oxford academic, and Provost of Worcester College. He was a moral philosopher by training, serving as Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Glasgow between 1936 and 1946. Oliver Shewell Franks married Barbara Tanner on 3 July 1931 at a Quaker meeting in Redland, Bristol. They had two daughters and she died in 1987. ==World War II==
World War II
At the beginning of the war he was employed by the Ministry of Supply, where he rose to become Permanent Secretary by 1945. During the war he achieved fame by replacing the supplies after Dunkirk, and also replaced supplies from losses in the Battle of the Atlantic. After the war he became Permanent Secretary to the Ministry of Supply, and was involved in a lecture entitled Central Planning and Control in War and Peace. ==Post-war activities==
Post-war activities
'' (1952) Franks was a Liberal and a great supporter of Clement Attlee. He was admired by Ernest Bevin. He had frequent conversations with Winston Churchill and Jawaharlal Nehru. After a spell as Provost of his alma mater, Queen's College (1946–8), he was summoned by Bevin in 1947 to head the British delegation at the European discussions about George Marshall's proposals of aid. When he returned to England from Washington he took up the post of Chairman of Lloyds Bank which he held only from 1954 to 1962, although he remained a director until 1975. Between 1960 and 1962 he was also chairman of Friends Provident. From 1962 to 1976 he was Provost of Worcester College, Oxford. ==Later life==
Later life
Franks presented the BBC Reith Lectures in 1954. In his series of six broadcasts, titled Britain and the Tide of World Affairs, he explored the state of postwar politics, and considered Britain's changing political relationships with the rest of the world. In 1960 he came a close second to Harold Macmillan in the election of the Chancellor of Oxford University. There were 1,697 votes for Macmillan, and 1,607 votes for Franks. He was the chairman of a Commission of Inquiry at the University of Oxford in 1964–65. Between 1965 and 1984 he was the Chancellor of the University of East Anglia. Aged 77, in 1982 he conducted an enquiry into the events leading to the Falklands War. He was chairman of the Board of Governors, of the United Oxford Hospitals, and of the Wellcome Trust, and of the Committee on Ministerial Affairs, of the Honours Scrutiny Committee, the President Kennedy Memorial Committee, the Rhodes Trust and the Rockefeller Foundation. Franks died aged 87. ==Honours==
Honours
Franks received the following honours and appointments: • Companion of the Order of the Bath. • Commander of the Order of the British Empire, 1942. • Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath, 1946. • Privy Counsellor, 1949. • International Member of the American Philosophical Society, 1949. • Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George, 1952. • Life peerage, as Baron Franks, of Headington in the County of Oxford, 10 May 1962. • Order of Merit, 1977. • Deputy Lieutenant for Oxfordshire, 1978. ==Arms==
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