Record revealed
Letters from the curator of St Vincent Botanic Gardens
Series
Catalogue reference: FO 801
FO 801
This series contains unpublished material, minutes, annexes to minutes, out-letter books, etc., of the Reparation Commission.
This series contains unpublished material, minutes, annexes to minutes, out-letter books, etc., of the Reparation Commission.
Material has been arranged in the following sequence:-
For the papers of the London Committee and the British Delegation to the Reparation Commission see T 194
The Treaty of Versailles in June 1919 did not directly settle the question of reparations in its financial aspects. It placed on Germany the moral responsibility for all damage done to the population of the Allied countries, and set up a Reparation Commission to assess the damage done and to lay down the method and times of payment, by May 1921.
Towards the end of 1923, the German economic position had so gravely deteriorated that an international committee of experts was set up to consider Germany's position, and to make proposals for stabilizing the currency and balancing the budget. The representatives of this committee were in form chosen by the Reparation Commission and appointed by them; there being two representatives from France, Belgium, Italy, Great Britain and the United States. The chairman was one of the representatives of the United States, General Charles G. Dawes, and the Committee became known as the Dawes Committee.
The introduction of the Dawes Scheme in 1924 put an end to the original reparation clauses.
Records created or inherited by the Foreign Office
Archives of Reparation Commission (1919)
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