Sir Ralph Lewis Wedgwood, 1st Baronet
CB CMG (2 March 1874 – 5 September 1956) was the Chief Officer of the
London & North Eastern Railway for 16 years from its inauguration in 1923. Also chairman of the wartime
Railway Executive Committee from September 1939 to August 1941. Knighted in 1924 and created a baronet in 1942.[1]
Wedgwood was the son of
Clement Wedgwood and his wife Emily, daughter of the engineer
James Meadows Rendel. His elder brother was
Josiah Wedgwood, 1st Baron Wedgwood. He married
Iris Veronica Pawson, daughter of Albert Henry Pawson on 24 October 1906 at
St. Margaret's, Westminster. They had two children who survived to adulthood;
John Hamilton Wedgwood (1907–1989), second baronet and
Cicely Veronica Wedgwood (1910–1997), historian. A second son, Ralph Pawson Wedgwood was born and died in 1909.
He was educated at
Clifton College and
Trinity College,
Cambridge,[2] where he became a member of the
Cambridge Apostles.[3] He was close friends there with his second cousin,
Ralph Vaughan Williams, who later dedicated two of his works to him, "In the Fen Country" and "
A Sea Symphony".[4] Ralph Wedgwood was an executor of
Joseph Conrad's will in 1924.[5]
An
A4 Class locomotive,
4469 Sir Ralph Wedgwood, was named after him but it was destroyed by bombing during
World War II. His name was later given to A4 Class 4466.