Samuel Finer, the youngest of six children, was born 22 September 1915 to
Romanian-
Jewish immigrant parents who had emigrated to the United Kingdom, and who ran a greengrocer's stall at Chapel Street market,
Islington. His parents were killed in
London in January 1945 by
V-2 rockets. One of his brothers,
Herman Finer, was also a distinguished political scientist and writer. Although Herman emigrated to the
United States, his achievement was, according to Finer, an early source of inspiration. Finer went to
Holloway School, where he won a scholarship to
Trinity College, Oxford. He obtained a double first in modern history and 'modern
Greats' (
PPE). After this, he began researching Sir
Edwin Chadwick, a
Benthamite civil servant. During
World War II he served in the
Royal Signals, where he attained the rank of captain. From 1946 to 1950, he taught politics at
Balliol College, Oxford, acquiring an impressive reputation as a teacher and lecturer. From 1950 to 1966 he served as Professor of Political Institutions at the new University College of North Staffordshire (now
Keele University). In 1966, he became head of the Department of Government at the
University of Manchester, teaching Government and generally successfully contributing to the revival of the department's reputation. In 1974, he was made
Gladstone Professor of Government at
All Souls College. He retired from this post in 1982, but continued writing – see
History of Government below. He has been described as a charismatic lecturer and a very effective administrator. He believed that the academic study of politics required a firm grounding in history, and was sceptical of attempts to convert the subject into a science based on such deterministic frameworks as
Marxism and
behavioralism. He was chairman of the
Political Studies Association of the UK from 1965 to 1969 and was a vice-president of the
International Political Science Association. Samuel Finer was a passionate
liberal democrat and supporter of the causes of
electoral reform and
Zionism. He was twice married and had two sons (one of whom is the musician
Jem Finer) and one daughter. He died on 9 June 1993, aged 77, leaving a widow, Catherine. (Most of the information in this section is derived from the collection-level description of the Samuel Finer Papers on the Archives Hub of the University of Manchester Special Collection.) ==
The History of Government ==