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Alan MacIver; Ralph Partridge

8 of 13 portraits of Ralph Partridge

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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Alan MacIver; Ralph Partridge

by Lady Ottoline Morrell
vintage snapshot print, 1920
3 in. x 1 3/4 in. (77 mm x 44 mm) image size
Purchased with help from the Friends of the National Libraries and the Dame Helen Gardner Bequest, 2003
Photographs Collection
NPG Ax140803

Sittersback to top

  • Alan MacIver. Sitter in 2 portraits.
  • Reginald Sherring ('Ralph') Partridge (1894-1960), Soldier in World War I and writer; former husband of Dora Carrington, and later husband of Frances Marshall. Sitter in 13 portraits, Artist or producer associated with 2 portraits.

Artistback to top

  • Lady Ottoline Morrell (1873-1938), Patron of the arts; half-sister of 6th Duke of Portland; wife of Philip Edward Morrell. Artist or producer associated with 1716 portraits, Sitter associated with 600 portraits.

Placesback to top

Events of 1920back to top

Current affairs

The Government of Ireland Act (Fourth Home Rule Bill) partitions Ireland into the Irish Free State with a devolved parliament in Dublin and Northern Ireland with a devolved parliament in Belfast.
The Communist Party of Great Britain is founded in London, uniting a number of independent socialist and Marxist parties into a single, united party.

Art and science

Queen Alexandra unveils a monument to Edith Cavell in St Martin's Place opposite the National Portrait Gallery. The English nurse was executed in Germany for helping hundreds of allied soldiers to cross the border from occupied Belgium to the neutral Netherlands.
George V officially opens the Imperial War Museum at the Crystal Palace.

International

The Kapp Putsch threatens the newly formed Weimar Republic. In defiance of the Treaty of Versailles, the leaders of the Marinebrigade Ehrhardt refused to disband and marched on Berlin, occupying it on the 13th March. With the general army refusing to defend the city, the government fled to Stuttgart. The rebellion, however, failed after the workers joined a general strike, disabling their plans.

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Robert B. Todd

20 July 2020, 17:36

Lytton Strachey was at Garsington in late May 1920 (Letters ed. Levy 461), and Partridge and McIver probably came along with him. They were friends in the army and at Oxford. Dora Carrington's letters (ed. Chisholm) have several references to McIver, who acted as a witness at her marriage to Partridge in May 1921. He disappears thereafter. He's not mentioned in Frances Partridge's diaries.