Lewis Bernard Golden

Lewis Bernard Golden (20 September 1878–11 November 1954) was a British charity administrator and first general secretary of Save the Children Fund from 1920 to 1937.

His early career was spent in the commercial sector, as general manager of the Anglo-Russian Trading Company.

Golden was appointed general secretary of Save the Children Fund, which had been founded in May 1919 to alleviate child starvation in post-war Europe.

As the Fund's first general secretary, he worked closely with its founders, Dorothy Buxton and Eglantyne Jebb, who recruited him with a view to establishing the charity on sustainable, business-like foundations.

[3] Whilst Jebb took responsibility for the organisation's policy and overall vision, Golden, with his managerial background, was relied upon to run the administrative side.