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The son of the third Marquess of Salibury (a former Prime Minister), he was educated at home until age 13, and then at Eton College and finally at Oxford where he studied law and excelled at debate.
After finishing his education he was admitted to the Bar (permitted to practice as a barrister), which he did for a decade before becoming involved in politics in 1906 when he entered the House of Commons (the elected house in the British system of government rather than the hereditary House of Lords).
During World War I, he served in a number of junior ministerial positions in the government, including several devoted to the war effort. It was perhaps this that led to a memorandum outlining his ideas for the avoidance of war, which according to Cecil was the "first document from which sprang British official advocacy of the League of Nations".
Through the early 1920's Cecil worked as an official British delegate to the league in a variety of capacities, but eventually he tired of his Cabinet colleague's indifference to it and retired from his political offices and, by 1932, from any official British role in the League, instead acting as an external advocate for it.
He attended the final meeting of the League in 1946 as it was superseded by the United Nations, a development that Cecil was happy to see.
He married Lady Eleanor Lampton.
| Preceded by: Austen Chamberlain | Lord Privy SealThe Lord Privy Seal or Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal is one of the traditional sinecure offices in the British Cabinet. Originally, its holder was responsible for the monarch's personal ("privy") seal (as opposed to the Great Seal of state, which is in th 1922–1924 | Followed by: John Robert ClynesClynes MP, Secretary of State for the Home Department John Robert Clynes ( 1869- 1949) began work in a cotton mill when he was 10 years old. At 16 he wrote a series of articles about child labour in the textile industry and in 1886 he helped form the Pier |