Background
Radcliffe was born in Llanychan, Denbighshire, Wales.
Radcliffe was born in Llanychan, Denbighshire, Wales.
He attended Oxford University, was elected to a Fellowship at All Souls College, and was called to the Barometer
He served as the inaugural Chancellor of the University of Warwick from its foundation in 1965 to 1977. He was conscripted in World War I but his poor eyesight limited the options for service so he was allocated to the Labour Corps. His meteoric legal rise that followed was interrupted by World World War World War II Radcliffe joined the Ministry of Information becoming its Director-General by 1941, where he worked closely with the Minister Brendan Bracken.
In 1944 he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire).
Radcliffe was given the chairmanship of the two boundary committees set up with the passing of the Indian Independence Acting. Radcliffe submitted his partition map on 9 August 1947.
The new boundaries were formally announced on 14 August 1947—the day of Pakistan"s independence and the day before India became independent. Radcliffe"s efforts saw some 14 million people—roughly seven million from each side—flee across the border when they discovered the new boundaries left them in the "wrong" country.
Some 500,000 people died in the violence that ensued after independence, and millions more were injured.
After seeing the mayhem occurring on both sides of the boundary that was created by him, Radcliffe refused his salary of 40,000 rupees (then 3,000 pounds). In 1949 Radcliffe was sworn of the Privy Council, made a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary (law lord) and created a life peer as Baron Radcliffe, of Werneth in the County of Lancaster. Unusually, he had not previously been a judge.
In the 1940s and 1950s he chaired a string of public enquiries in addition to his legal duties and continued to hold numerous trusteeships, governorships and chairmanships right up until his death.
He chaired the Committee of Enquiry into the Future of the British Film Institute (1948), whose recommendations led to the modernisation of the BFI in the post-war period. From 1957 he was chairman of the Radcliffe Committee, called to enquire into the working of the monetary and cr system.
He was also a frequent public speaker and wrote numerous books: he gave the British Broadcasting Corporation Reith Lecture in 1951 - a series of seven broadcasts titled Power and the State which examined the features of democratic society, and considered the problematic notions of power and authority. He also presented the Oxford University Romanes Lecture in 1963 on Mountstuart Elphinstone.
In 1962 he was made a hereditary peer as Viscount Radcliffe, of Hampton Lucy in the County of Warwick.