- Bullock, Alan Louis Charles
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▪ 2005British historian (b. Dec. 13, 1914, Trowbridge, Wiltshire, Eng.—d. Feb. 2, 2004, Oxford, Eng.), was founding master of St. Catherine's College, Oxford, and the author of major historical studies and biographies, notably Hitler: A Study in Tyranny (1952), Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives (1991), and the three-volume The Life and Times of Ernest Bevin (1960, 1967, and 1983). His other principal historical works included The Humanist Tradition in the West (1985). Bullock was educated at Bradford Grammar School and Wadham College, Oxford, and took first-class degrees in both classical greats (1936) and modern history (1938). After working for the BBC during World War II, he took up a fellowship at New College, Oxford, where he taught modern history and served as dean. He became known to the general public by appearing on the BBC radio program The Brains Trust. In 1952 Bullock became head of the St. Catherine's Society (for students unable to afford residence at a college), and he was instrumental in its transformation into St. Catherine's College in 1962. He was master of St. Catherine's until 1980 and served as vice-chancellor of the university from 1969 to 1973. Outside Oxford, he served as chairman of the National Advisory Committee on the Training and Supply of Teachers (1963–65), the School's Council (1966–69), the Committee of Inquiry into Reading and the Use of English (1972–74), and the Committee of Inquiry on Industrial Democracy (1976–77). He was a founding member of the Social Democratic Party (later the Liberal Democratic Party). He was knighted in 1972 and was made a life peer, as Baron Bullock of Leafield, in 1976.
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Universalium. 2010.