Amidst the First World War, in January 1917 he was seconded to serve in the Ministry of Food;[2][3] he was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in the 1919 New Year Honours for his work.[4] Having resigned as Chief Justice on 30 June 1919,[5] he was the Ministry of Food's Permanent Secretary from November 1919 until March 1921,[6] when the ministry was dissolved.[7] From 1921 to 1925, he was Secretary of the Food Department at the Board of Trade. In 1926, he published A State Trading Adventure, a history of his work in food control during the war. He died on 8 October 1938.[2]
References
↑Joseph Foster, Oxford Men, 1880–1892 (Oxford: James Parker and Co., 1893), p. 125.