Friday, 31 March 2017
1515 Joseph Andrews
Constituency : Barkston Ash 1905-06
Joseph took Barkston Ash in 1905 to become the only non-Conservative MP in the constituency's 98-year history.
Joseph was educated at the Ripon Cathedral Choir School. He became a barrister. He also hunted and raced horses.
Unfortunately Parliament had broken up by the time of the by-election and as the Conservatives regained the seat in 1906, Joseph never took his place in the Commons.
Joseph died of appendiciis in 1909 aged just 36.
Thursday, 30 March 2017
1514 John Sutherland
Constituency : Elgin Burghs 1905-18
John took over at Elgin Burghs after the death of Alexander Archer. he had an esty win over a Tory.
John was educated at Edinburgh University. He was a partner in a fish curing firm and a recognised expert on the fishing industry, He was Chairman of the Scottish Temperance and Social Reform Association. He was on Banffshire County Council.
Unsurprisingly, most of his parliamentary interventions were on fishing questions.
John crushed his Tory opponent in 1906 and then a Liberal Unionist in January 1910. He was unopposed in December 1910.
He died in 1918 aged 64.
Wednesday, 29 March 2017
1513 Frederick Chance
Constituency : Carlisle 1905-10
Frederick took over at Carlisle when the Speaker William Gully was forced to step down on health grounds.
Frederick's family operated a large cotton mill in the town. He was the nephew of Robert Ferguson, MP for Carlisle from 1874 to 1886. He was Mayor of Carlisle in 1904 and sat on Cumberland County Council.
Frederick was unopposed in 1906.
Frederick's only speech in the Commons was in support of the Education Bill.
Frederick stood down in January 1910.
He died in 1932 aged 79.
Tuesday, 28 March 2017
1512 Sir John Dickson-Poynder
Constituency : Chippenham 1892-1905 ( Conservative ) 1905-10
Sir John was the last of the Conservative defectors in the 1900-06 Parliament. He had repudiated the Cobnservative whip in 1903 but didn't join the Liberals until July 1905.
John was the son of a rear admiral. He was educated at Harrow and Oxford. He succeeded to his uncle's baronetcy in 1884. He had considerable estates in Wiltshire.He was first elected as Conservative MP for Chippenham in 1892. He also sat on London County Council from 1898 to 1904. John was active in the Volunteers but served for real in the Boer War as a lieutenant. He was a member of the Navy League . He won the DSO in 1900.
In 1907 John led a small revolt against the smallholdings bill which he wanted amending to favour ownership rather than tenancy.
In 1910 John was created Baron Islington and appointed Governor of New Zealand. He held the post for two years then became President of the Royal Commission on Public Services of India. In 1914 he became Under Secretary of State for the Colonies then Under Secretary of State for India. He remained in this post when Lloyd George took over. He stepped down in 1919. From 1920 to 1926 he was head of the National Savings Committee.
He died in 1936 aged 70.
Monday, 27 March 2017
1511 Joseph Baker
Constituency : Finsbury East 1905-18
Joseph took Finsbury East from the Tories.
Joseph was born and educated in Canada. He started work there in his father's engineering business. He came to London in 1878 and started a UK branch Baker & Sons which he chaired after the death of his father. He was a Quaker and tried to be a model employer. His company had contracts with London County Council to build tramways in the London area. They later designed a new lorry to service the docks. He was elected a Progressive councillor for Finsbury East in 1895 and became chairman of the Housing Committee. He contested the parliamentary seat in 1900.
Joseph held onto the seat with thin majorities in both 1910 elections.
Joseph was a strong supporter of international ecumenism, armaments reduction and temperance.
During World War One Joseph raised funds for an ambulance unit.
In July 1918 he suffered a stroke in the Commons and died two weeks later aged 66.
Sunday, 26 March 2017
1510 Noel Buxton
Constituency : Whitby 1905-06, North Norfolk 1910-18, 1922-30 ( Labour )
Noel took Whitby after the Tory was elevated to the peerage.
Noel was the second son of the former King's Lynn MP, Thomas Buxton. He was educated at Harrow and Cambridge and went to work in the family brewery. Noel served his father as aide-de-camp when Buxton Sr was Governor of South Australia. He contested Ipswich in 1900. He was a supporter of progressive New Liberalism.
Noel was narrowly defeated in 1906. He returned for North Norfolk in 1910.
Noel supported Britain's involvement in the First World War. In 1915, Noel and his brother Charles went to Bulgaria on a doomed mission to try and secure Bulgarian neutrality. Both were shot and wounded by a Turkish agent. Noel had a long-standing interest in the Balkans. He voted for conscription but fell out with the government when they decided not to participate in the Stockholm Conference in 1917. He came to be identified as a pacifist.
Noel was defeated in 1918 by Henry King who stood as an Independent Unionist endorsed by the government. He had been Noel's Tory opponent in the 1910 elections and rejoined them not long afterwards . Noel joined the Labour party almost immediately after the election believing that the Liberals had abandoned their values .
Noel regained the seat in 1922 as a Labour man against a new Conservative opponent. He held it reasonably comfortably despite the Liberals fielding candidates in 1924 and 1929.
As Labour had few rural constituencies MacDonald made Noel Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries in 1924 and again in 1929.
Noel resigned on medical advice in 1930 and was elevated to the peerage as Baron Noel-Buxton. His wife took over the seat. He became President of the Save the Children Fund until his death.
Noel was a supporter of appeasement and urged Halifax to agree to German demands in Czechoslovakia . He supported a negotiated peace with Germany during the war.
He died in 1948 aged 79.
Saturday, 25 March 2017
1509 Ernest Villiers
Constituency ; Brighton 1905-10
Ernest took one of the Brighton seats after a Tory incumbent was elevated to the Lords.
Ernest was a vicar's son although he was descended from the 1st Earl of Clarendon. He was educated at Uppingham School and Cambridge. He was ordained as an Anglican priest and had a parish in Norfolk. He was related to Ivor Guest by marriage. He gave up holy orders to become a politician.
Ernest's maiden speech called for Balfour to hold an election. He tried to amend the Education Bill of 1906 to ensure more religious teaching.
Ernest stood down in January 1910.
He died in 1923 aged 59.
Friday, 24 March 2017
1508 Norman Lamont
Constituency : Buteshire 1905-10
The attrition went on as Norman took Buteshire which had been Tory since his father stepped down in 1868.He won by 34 votes. There had been talk of an independent tariff reformer standing but his supporters were happy that the Tory candidate was a firm supporter of Chamberlain's proposals. Norman was accused of hypocrisy on the issue of Chinese coolie labour but was able to prove he didn't use indentured labour on his sugar plantations. He also received support from Catholic voters. on Home Rule.
Norman was the son of the former MP for the seat, the Arctic explorer James Lamont. He was educated at Winchester and Downton Agricultural College. Agriculture remained his primary interest as an adult. He was interested in Scottish history particularly that of his own family, the clan Lamont. He contested Buteshire in 1900 and lost by 195 votes. He became Honorary Secretary of the Scottish Liberal Association in 1904. He was a Presbyterian.
Norman held on in 1906 by 120 votes. He became unpaid Parliamentary Private Secretary to Campbell-Bannerman. In 1909 he switched to the same role for Churchill at the Board of Trade. He sat on a departmental committee on agricultural education and chaired a committee on labour exchanges in 1909.
Norman lost the seat in January 1910 by 159 votes. He declined to stand in December and went off to his sugar plantation in Trinidad. He served on the Legislative Council of Trinidad and Tobago from 1915 to 1923. He was a Governor of the Imperial College of Tropical Agriculture from 1921 to 1945.
Norman succeeded to his father's baronetcy in 1913.
He died in 1949 after being injured by a bull on his estates aged 79.
Thursday, 23 March 2017
1507 ( 441a) James Lamont
Constituency : Buteshire 1865-8
Here's another mistake uncovered- I had the Tories holding this seat in 1865-68.
James won the seat from the Tories.
James was the son of a Tory army officer . He was educated at Rugby and Edinburgh Military Academy. He had estates in Scotland and Trinidad. He became an explorer who travelled in the Arctic, Africa and the West Indies. He did a lot of hunting, particularly of walruses and wrote two books about his exploits . A Russian island is named after him. He was a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. He corresponded with Darwin and championed his theories. He contested Buteshire in 1859 but was defeated by nine votes. He tried again at a by-election in 1865 castigating his Tory opponent as a Catholic in disguise.
James opposed Gladstone's plans for Irish disestablishment which led to his de-selection in 1868.
James was created a baronet in 1910.
He died in 1913 aged 85. His son Norman was a later MP for the constituency.
Wednesday, 22 March 2017
1506 Leifchild Jones
Constituency : Appleby 1905-10, Rushcliffe 1910-18, Camborne 1923-4, 1929-31
Leifchild won the by-election caused by Richard Rigg's suicidal decision to go over to the Conservatives. He won by 220 votes
Leifchild was the son of a Nonconformist clergyman from Wales. After his mother died, the family spent a few years in Australia so Leifchild was partly educated there. He later went to Oxford.. He became private secretary to the Countess of Carlisle, an ardent prohibitionist.
Leifchild was a supporter of female suffrage but he is best remembered as a leading and uncompromising temperance campaigner.He was president of the United Kingdom Alliance from 1906 to 1932. Many of his parliamentary contributions were on the subject.
Leifchild held on by only 8 votes in 1906 and was defeated in January 1910. He returned as MP for Rushcliffe in December.
Despite remaining loyal to Asquith, Leif urged Lloyd George to introduce prohibition during the war.
Leifchild was defeated by the Conservatives in 1918.
Leifchild contested Camborne in 1922 but was defeated by the National Liberal candidate Algenon Moreing. In 1923 he turned the tables as an Independent when Moreing was recognised as the official Liberal candidate. In 1924 Moreing won the seat back as a Constitutionalist, soon joining the Conservatives . In 1929 Leifchild ousted him again.
Leifchild was defeated by a different Conservative candidate in 1931.
In 1932 Leifchild was created Baron Rhyader.
He died in 1939 aged 77.
Tuesday, 21 March 2017
1505 Arthur Wills
Constituency : North Dorset 1905-10
Arthur took North Dorset from the Tories.
Arthur was educated at Harrow and Cambridge. He became a barrister.
Arthur was defeated in January 1910 and failed to regain it in December.
He died in 1948 aged 80.
Monday, 20 March 2017
1504 Ernest Hatch
Constituency : Gorton 1895 - 1905 ( Conservative ) 1905-06
Ernest followed in the footsteps of Churchill et al and crossed the floor to the Liberals in 1905 over the tariff reform issue.
Ernest was privately educated and went into business as a wine merchant. He was the unsuccessful candidate at Gorton in a by-election of 1889 and in 1892. He was successful in 1895 and held the seat with a reduced majority in 1900. He was a keen traveller and an amateur film-maker whose travelogue films of China and Canada became unexpectedly popular. He also wrote a book about his impressions of the Far East.
There was already a dispute between the local Liberals and the L.R.C. who wanted John Hodge as their candidate. Herbert Gladstone let Ernest know he was reluctant to support his candidature in Gorton and when Churchill followed suit he withdrew from the 1906 contest.
In 1908 Ernest was created a baronet. He became chairman and treasurer of University College Hospital.
During World War One Ernest was chair of the Government Commission on Belgian Refugees and received a Belgian honour for his work.
He died in 1927 aged 68.
Sunday, 19 March 2017
1503 Thomas Richards
Constituency : West Monmouthshire 1904-09, 1909-18 ,Ebbw Vale 1918-20 ( Labour )
Thomas took over at West Monmouthshire on the death of Sir William Harcourt. He easily defeated an Independent Conservative candidate. The Liberals' preferred nominee Marshall Warmington the previous MP who'd made way for Harcourt in 1895, refused to oppose a labour candidate. Some Nonconformist ministers in the West Monmouth Liberal Association were fiercely opposed to Thomas's candidature even though he was a congregational deacon.
Thomas was a Lib-Lab candidate, He was a miner who had started as a collier boy at 12. He was General Secretary of the South Wales Miners Federation.
Thomas's maiden speech was in favour of shortening the hours of boys in the mines.
Thomas was unopposed in 1906.
In 1909 Thomas obeyed the instruction to leave the Liberals.They did not oppose him in either of the 1910 elections.
Thomas was unopposed in 1918.
Thomas resigned his seat in 1920. He was Vice-President of the Miners Federation of Great Britain from 1924 and |President from 1929.
He died in 1931 aged 72.
Saturday, 18 March 2017
1502 Alexander Findlay
Constituency ; North East Lanarkshire 1904-10
Alexander reversed the Liberal Unionists' by-election gain of 1901 following the death of William Rattigan.
Alexander was a temperance supporter.
Alexander stood down in January 1910.
He died in 1921 aged 76.
Friday, 17 March 2017
1501 Rufus Isaacs
Constituency : Reading 1904-13
Rufus took over from George Palmer at Reading.
Rufus was the son of a Jewish fruit merchant at Spitalfields. He was educated at University College School. He worked in the family firm, then as a ship's boy, then on the Stock Exchange. He then became a barrister.
Rufus was initially a Liberal Imperialist and then a moderate centrist but he gave strong support to Lloyd George's land reform proposals and National Insurance.
In 1910 Rufus became Solicitor-General in Asquith's government. Six months later he was promoted to Attorney-General and in 1912 was admitted into the Cabinet to soothe his irritation at not being made Lord Chancellor. He represented the Board of Trade at the Titanic inquiry.
In 1913 Rufus was elevated to the Lords as Baron Reading and became Lord Chief Justice.
Rufus was implicated in the Marconi scandal because his brother Geoffrey was chairman of the Marconi company at the time. He successfuly sued the French magazine Le Matin, who her broken the story. for libel.
In 1915, Rufus led the Anglo-French Financial Commission seeking financial aid from the U.S. In 1916 he was upgraded to a viscount and a year later to an eral.From 1918 to 1919 , he was Ambassador to the U.S. ( i.e while President Wilson was at the Paris Peace Conference ).
In 1921, Rufus resigned as Lord Chief Justice in order to become Viceroy of India. He pursued a conciliatory policy although he did imprison Gandhi in 1922. He stepped down in 1926 and was upgraded to a marquess, the highest title ever attained by a Jew.
In August 1931, Rufus became Foreign Secretary in the National Government but resigned through ill-health that November.
He died in 1935 aged 75.
Thursday, 16 March 2017
1500 Allan Bright
Constituency : Oswestry 1904-06
Allan took Oswestry, a Tory seat since its inception in 1885. Churchill came up to speak for him in a heated campaign.
Allan was from Liverpool. His father was a Unitarian poet. He was educated at Malvern School and Harrow. He worked in a firm of tinplate merchants and shipping agents. He was one of Liverpool's leading Liberals. He contested a by-election at Exeter in 1899 which he felt he would have won but for his pro-Boer views. Before the 1900 election he joined the South Africa Conciliation Committee. He stood again at Exeter and was heavily defeated. In 1901 he contested a by-election at Oswestry but was unsuccessful blaming "landlordism" and "shortness of time" for his defeat. The Tory victor succeeded to a title in 1904 . He was married to Edith Turner a prominent suffragist.
In 1906 Allan lost his seat to a Tory. He claimed that intimidation had taken place during the campaign.
In 1910 Allan contested Styalybridge but lost by 57 votes. He was unsuccessful in December as well. He attributed these defeats to the personal popularity of his Tory opponent, a local employer.
Allan became deputy chairman of the Union Bank of Manchester. He lived in Herefordshire and wrote books on Middle English literature. He was interested in psychic research.
He died in 1941 aged 79.
Wednesday, 15 March 2017
1499 John Higham
Constituency : Sowerby 1904-18
John took over at Sowerby on the resignation of John Mellor.
John was the son of an Accrington cotton manufacturer. He was privately educated. He was chairman of his father-in-law's jam manufacturing business and eventually headed his father's firm.. He was a Lancashire county councillor and Mayor of Accrington from 1899 to 1901.
John was an advanced Radical supporting diesestablishment of the church, Home Rule and railway nationalisation. He was a member of the Land Values Group supporting rating reform.
John was unopposed in 1910.
In 1918 John was offered the coupon but rejected it. As a consequence, he came third with the winner standing for the National Association of Discharged Sailors and Soldiers, a body that leaned towards the Conservatives.
John retired to Southport.
John was also treasurer of a regional temperance organisation and President of the UK Commercial Travellers' Association from 1926 to 1927.
He died in 1932 aged 74.
Monday, 13 March 2017
1498 Richard Bell
Constituency : Derby 1900-04 ( Labour ), 1904-10
Richard's defection was ostensibly from the other side although he had won his sat in tandem with the Liberal Thomas Roe in 1900 and had only stood as a Labour candidate because his union demanded it.
Richard was born in Merthyr to English parents. His father was a quarryman who later became a policeman in Glamorgan . Richard had a basic education. He worked for a number of railway companies and rose to become general secretary of the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants. He was involved in both the Taff Vale and Osborne cases. Once elected, he did not work effectively alongside Keir Hardie as he preferred Liberal policies to socialism. He saw the L.R.C. as a pressure group within the liberal umbrella rather than a truly independent force. Although he was chairman of the Labour Representation Commitee in 1902-03 he chafed against its rules and supported Liberal candidates in by-elections including at Norwich in 1903 where there was a Labour candidate in the field. Despite Richard being president of the T.U.C. that year , the L.R.C. repudiated him in 1904 leaving him free to join the Liberals.
Even after his defection, Richard's parliamentary contributions were mainly on railway matters.
Richard was comfortably re-elected in 1906. In fact he topped the poll. However by 1909 the Derby Trades Council had become dissatisfied with his caution and switched to a Labour candidate from the same union, Jimmy Thomas. Richard resigned his post and retired from Parliament , leaving Thomas to be elected alongside Roe in January 1910.
After leaving Parliament Richard worked at the Employment Exchange branch of the Board of Trade. He retired in 1920 but was a councillor in Southgate for most of the twenties.
He died in 1930 aged 70.
Sunday, 12 March 2017
1497 Ivor Guest
Constituency : Plymouth 1900-04 ( Conservative ), 1904-06 , Cardiff 1906-10
Ivor also followed in Churchill's footsteps.
Ivor was the son and heir of Baron Wimborne and Churchill's first cousin. He was educated at Eton and Cambridge. He volunteered to serve in the Boer War and became a lieutenant in the Imperial Yeomanry. He was promoted to captain in 1902. He contested two by-elections at Plymouth as a Conservative . He was unsuccessful in 1898 but won in 1900.
Ivor's first speech as a Liberal was against some of the compensation proposals in the 1904 Licensing Bill.
Ivor switched to Cardiff in 1906.
Ivor was very concerned about the land taxes in the People's Budget as his father had transferred considerable property to him two years earlier and the Budget was extending the qualifying period to five years. Ivor doubted his father would last that long and was part of a deputation of around 30 rich Liberals to Asquith on the matter. He threatened to resign his seat.
Ivor stood down in 1910 and was elevated to the Lords as a working peer Baron Ashby St Leger. He was immediately appointed as Paymaster-General serving until 1912. He became a lord-in-waiting in 1913. In 1914 he suceeded his father as Baron Wimborne.
At the start of the First World War, Ivor joined the staff of the 10th ( Irish ) Division at Curragh. In 1915 he became Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and also head of recruiting there. He proclaimed martial law in Dublin when the Easter Rising started. He ceremonially resigned under pressure and was then re-appointed. The Royal Commission on the Rebellion exonerated him of any blame. He retired in 1918 and was upgraded to Viscount Wimborne.
Ivor welcomed the formation of the National Government but opposed the idea of an early election.
He died in 1939 aged 66.
Saturday, 11 March 2017
1496 John Seely
Constituency : Isle of Wight 1900-04 ( Conservative ), 1904-06, Liverpool Abercromby 1906-10, Ilkeston 1910-22, Isle of Wight 1923-24
John quickly followed Churchill's example although in his case he'd put himself up for re-election earlier in the year as an "Independent Conservative ". The Tories had declined the challenge and he'd been returned unopposed.
John was the brother of the Liberal Unionist MP Charles Seely. He was educated at Harrow and Cambridge. He met Churchill at Harrow and they became lifelong friends. He became a barrister. He was a keen Volunteer and was commissioned as a captain in the Imperial Yeomanry when the Boer War broke out. He won a by-election at the Isle of Wight while serving in South Africa and then retained it in the general election, again as an absentee candidate. He won the D.S.O. that year. |He fell out with the Conservatives over tariff reform and the use of Chinese labour in South Africa.
John switched seats to Liverpool Abercromby in 1906. He was appointed Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies by Asquith in 1909. He helped establish the Union of South Africa that year. He strongly supported the People's Budget.
John was defeated in January 1910 but was returned for Ilkeston in December. In 1911 he became Under-Secretary of State for War. In 1912 he was promoted to Secretary of State. He was responsible for developing the Expeditionary Force and establishing a Flying Corps. His tenure came to an end when Asquith demanded his resignation for amending a Cabinet document in response to the Curragh Incident.
John had little time to brood on his misfortune as he was called up to serve as a special services officer on the Western Front. John won more medals for his conduct and was promoted to Colonel and put in charge of the Canadian Cavalry Brigade. John acquired the nickname "Galloping Jack" and his cavalry horse, "Warrior", became famous. He returned to London in 1918 suffering from exposure to gas and Lloyd George made him Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Munitions i.e Churchill's deputy.
In 1919 John was moved to Under Secretary of State for Air, again serving under Churchill. He resigned later that year over Lloyd George's refusal to create a Secretary of State for Air.
In 1922 John lost his seat to Labour. He returned to the Isle of Wight and held the seat for the Liberals in 1923 by 90 votes. Churchill told Baldwin that John would vote against the Labour government and probably come over to the Conservatives .However John was defeated by the Unionists in 1924.
In 1926, John was appointed chairman of the National Savings Committee, a post he held until 1943. In 1933 he was created Baron Mottistone.
In 1935 John parted company from Churchill by lavishly praising Hitler and became a strong supporter of appeasement.
John wrote a number of books but was a little cavalier with the truth.
He died in 1947 aged 79.
Friday, 10 March 2017
1495 Winston Churchill
Constituency : Oldham 1900-04 ( Conservative ), 1904-06, Manchester North West 1906-08, Dundee 1908-22, Epping 1924-5 ( Constitutionalist then Conservative ), Woodford 1945-64
This is a milestone post . As I always expected he would be, Winston is the first of the MPs we're discussing to ( just about ) survive into my own lifetime. My dad was a big fan and went down to London for his funeral; I don't expect my mum was greatly enthusiastic about being left at home with a month old baby however much respect she had for the great man.
Winston eneters the story at this point because, having been elected as a Conservative in 1900, in May 1904 he crossed the floor of the House and joined the Liberals in response to the Conservatives turning towards protectionism.
Winston was the son of Lord Randolph Churchill the Tory politician who crashed and burned in the 1880s. He was educated at Harrow but did not prosper academically. He went on to Sandhurst and joined the 4th Queen's Own Hussars. He also became a war correspondent for several newspapers to supplement his income. He saw action in India and the Sudan before returning to the UK to unsuccessfully contest a by-election at Oldham in 1899. He then saw action in the Boer War where he escaped from a P.O.W. camp and took part in the Siege of Ladysmith. In the 1900 election he was elected for the Conservatives at Oldham. He soon fell out with the party over tariffs and in one speech said that " To think you can make a man richer by putting on a tax is like a man thinking that he can stand in a bucket and lift himself by the handle". When his constituency party disowned him, he made the decision to join the Liberals.
Winston switched his constituency to Manchester North West for the 1906 election. He was appointed him Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies. His major task was settling the Transvaal Constitution.
Asquith promoted Winston to President of the Board of Trade, a Cabinet post , in succession to his friend Lloyd George. The two men shared the political vision that the Liberals must hold Labour off by implementing advanced social reforms to benefit the working man. He was defeated in the by-election to confirm his new post but was soon returned for Dundee.
Asquith later complained to Harcourt that Winston took up too much Cabinet time.
In 1908 Winston introduced the Trade Boards Bill to fix minimum wages. In 1909 he set up labour exchanges. He also helped draft the legislation for national insurance. He helped Lloyd George by presiding over the Budget League which championed the Chancellor's policies.
In 1910 Asquith promoted Winston to Home Secretary in succession to Herbert Gladstone. There he proceeded to lose the working man's trust by his heavy-handed response to the Cambrian Colliery dispute. He also incurred criticism by appearing in person at the Sidney Street Siege , not the last time his impetuosity would get him into trouble.
In 1911 Winston became First Lord of the Admiralty and set about modernising the navy. He was a voice for war in the Cabinet's discussions in August 1914 . In October he went to Antwerp to stiffen resistance. Though unsuccessful he claimed that his action delayed the surrender and allowed the securing of Calais and Dunkirk.
In 1915 Winston, impatient at the stalemate in the West, enthusiastically backed a scheme to use spare naval capacity and colonial troops to attack Turkey in the Dardanelles campaign. When this proved an embarrrassing failure, the Conservatives demanded his removal from the Admiralty as a price for joining the wartime coalition. Winston was retained in the Cabinet as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. He resigned a few months later and rejoined the army as a lieutenant colonel on the Western front. He made some forays into no man's land but was not involved in serious action.
When Lloyd George became Prime Minister he gave Winston a leg up and appointed him Minister of Munitions. After the war he made him Secretary State for War and for Air. He was the chief advocate of military intervention in Russia to topple the Bolshevik government. He also supported a military alliance with France. He was also involved in sending the Black and Tans into Ireland. In 1921, he succeeded Montagu as Secretary of State for the Colonies and was a signatory of the Anglo-Irish treaty .
In 1922 Winston was ousted at Dundee in a bizarre result which placed a Scottish Prohibitionist Edwin Scrymgeour at the head of the poll. Scrymgeour had contested every election at Dundee since 1908 but had never come close to winning the seat. What ensured Churchill's defeat was another National Liberal candidate D McDonald standing. He split the vote and ensured neither of them got elected. Winston's appendectomy during the campaign didn't help his campaign.
In 1923 Winston was seen off fairly easily at Leicester West by Labour.
By 1924 Winston had become highly hostile to Labour and contested the Westminster Abbey by-election as a "Constitutionalist" advocating a new coalition between the Tories and the Liberals. He hoped for support from both anti-socialist parties. In the event both the Unionists defending the seat and the local Liberals put candidates in the field. The Liberal candidate declared he was only standing to oppose Churchill which contributed to his departure from the party. He came a very close second to the Unionist.
Later in the year Winston secured the backing of the Unionist party in Epping to stand as a "Constitutionalist" ( his lead followed by a number of other waverers ) and defeated a Liberal to return to Parliament. When Baldwin asked him to become Chancellor of the Exchequer he dropped the label and became a Tory once again.
As Chancellor , Winston oversaw the disastrous return to the gold standard which seriously damaged the British economy. During the opposition years of 1929-31, he became increasingly estranged from the Tory leadership over protection and Indian self-government. He was not invited into the National Government in 1931 and spent the early part of the thirties concentrating on writing. His support for Edward VIII only underlined his isolation.
Winston started calling for rearmament from 1936 and Neville Chamberlain was quick to restore him to the Admiralty when war broke out. Though it seems inevitable in hindsight, Winston's accession to the premiership in 1940 was almost by accident. He was hardly less culpable than Chamberlain for the failure in Norway and a majority in the House would have accepted Halifax if he'd been willing to accept the position. As we know, Winston's rhetoric inspired the nation to carry on the fight against Hitler until the American's arrived though his actual wartime record is stained by the betrayal of Poland and the anti-Soviet Russians.
Winston was then rejected by the electorate in 1945, tired of Tories after 14 years of the so-called "National" Government. His own "reds under the bed " rhetoric, directed against his stalwart wartime allies, undoubtedly contributed to the drubbing. He toured the USA where he made his "iron curtain" speech in 1946. He continued as Tory leader largely because his obvious successor, Eden, was happy to bide his time.
So it was that Winston in his eighties became a peacetime Prime Minister in 1951. Retaining some affection for his old party he invited the Liberal leader Clement Davies to join the government but the offer was declined. His administration was notable for Macmillan's efforts to deal with housing and the slow deterioration of Britain's world power status.. His health got worse after a stroke in 1953 and he might have retired then had Eden not been seriously ill himself at the time. Instead he lingered until 1955 before stepping down though he remained an MP.
Winston's declining health and infrequent attendance in the Commons were largely kept secret from the public although his constituents were starting to notice and his majority fell in 1959. He was persuaded to step down at the 1964 election. He died in January 1965 aged 90.
Thursday, 9 March 2017
1494 Charles Lyell
Constituency : East Dorset 1904-10, Edinburgh South 1910-17
Charles took East Dorset when the Tory succeeded to a barony.
Charles was the son of the former Orkney and Shetland MP Leonard Lyell. He was educated at Eton and Oxford.
Charles's parliamentary interventions were usually on military matters
In 1906 Leonard became Parliamentary Private Secretary to Edward Grey at the Foreign Office.
In January 1910 Charles abandoned East Dorset to stand in Edinburgh West but was unsuccessful. He returned for Edinburgh South in December.
Charles became Asquith's PPS. in 1911.
Charles had been an active Volunteer and in 1914 became a captain in the Fife Royal Garrison Artillery. In May 1915 he was promoted to major.
Charles resigned his seat in 1917 and became military Attache to the USA.
Charles died of pneumonia just three weeks before the end of the war aged 43.
Wednesday, 8 March 2017
1493 Lewis Harcourt
Constituency : Rossendale 1904-17
Lewis retained Rossendale for the Liberals after the resignation of Sir William Mather. I didn't have to look up the dates for his tenure as Lewis is the first of a cluster of MPs that featured in my dissertation at University.
Lewis was the only son of William Harcourt to survive infancy. was in delicate health as a boy and father and son had a very close relationship, Lewis's mother having died soon after his birth. He was educated at Eton. The family estates enabled him to be a full time politician. He served as his father's private secretary and became known as a great intriguer and wirepuller on his father's behalf. He helped keep his father in the Liberal Party in 1886. He acquired the unflattering nickname of "Loulou". He tried to secure his father's accession to the leadership in 1894 earning only the lifelong enmity of Rosebery. He was a loyal supporter of Campbell-Bannerman after his father resigned the Commons leadership .His father's failing health in 1904 prompted him to enter Parliament himself.
Campbell-Bannerman made him First Commissioner of Works and admitted him to the Cabinet in 1907. Lewis made notes during Cabinet meetings in defiance of convention and Asquith's express instructions. He and Asquith were near neighbours in Oxfordshire and held similar opinions most notably on female suffrage. .Despite claiming Radical credentials he disliked and obstructed many of the provisions in the People's Budget.
In 1910 he became Colonial Secretary. He upset George V with his strident tone during the Home Rule crisis. A new port in Nigeria was named after him in 1912.
That year, Charles Hobhouse wrote of him "Harcourt has many attractive qualities : charming manners when he likes, a temper under good control , a hard worker but no one trusts him and everyone thinks that language is only employed by him to conceal his thought." Three years later he added "subtle, secretive and adroit and not very reliable or au fond courageous, does not interfere often in discussion but is fond of conversing with the P.M. in undertones".
Lewis initially supported British neutrality in World War One but was won round to Asquith's position.
When Asquith formed his coalition with the Tories, Lewis went back to being First Commissioner Of Works. He told Asquith he would not accept the Home Office when Simon resigned over conscription.
Lewis resigned along with Asquith in 1916 not least because his health was suffering after a decade in office. The following year was elevated to the peerage as Viscount Harcourt. Like Asquith he now accepted the inevitability of female suffrage.
Lewis was a trustee of the British Museum and the National Portrait Gallery. He enjoyed photography and gardening.
In a book in 1995 the gay former Tory MP and political columnist Matthew Parris claimed that Lewis was known to be a paedophile but protected by society up until 1921 when an incident became known to the police . He claims that Lewis's death in 1922 , aged 59, by accidental overdose, was actually a suicide that was hushed up by his friends. There was no hint of any of this in the Harcourt papers deposited in the Bodleian Library when I examined them in 1906.
In 2014 some of his diary extracts were included in a book about the causes of Britain's involvement in the First World War.
Tuesday, 7 March 2017
1492 William Parrott
Constituency : Normanton 1904-05
William took over as Lib-Lab MP for Normanton in succession to the deceased Ben Pickard. He won the seat with a huge majority over a Tory.
William was from a working class background with no formal education. He worked in a brickyard and factory before becoming a miner. In 1872 he was elected the checkweighman at his pit and from that point became drawn into trade union work. In 1881 he was elected agent of the newly amalgamated Yorkshire Miner's Association, a post he held for twenty years. He became general secretary in 1904.In 1899 he was elected auditor of the Standing Orders Committee of the TUC .He was also a councillor in Barnsley. Despite having suffered a paralytic seizure in 1903 , he was prospective Liberal candidate in East Leeds when Pickard died. He was a Methodist lay preacher.
William's maiden speech was against the coal levy in the Fiance Bill in 1904.
He died in 1905 after a long illness aged 61.
Monday, 6 March 2017
1491 Charles Howard aka Viscount Morpeth
Constituency : Birmingham South 1904-11 ( Liberal Unionist )
Charles took over at Birmingham South for the Liberal Unionists following the death of Chamberlain's acolyte, Joseph Powell-Williams.
Charles was the son and heir of the Earl of Carlisle. He had the title of Viscount Morpeth. He was educated at Rugby and Oxford. Charles joined the 3rd Border Regiment and became a captain. He served in the Boer War. He was also involved in Birmingham's municipal politics as Chairman of Works.
Charles' maiden speech was on the Licening Bill in 1904. He was a teetotaller himself but a pragmatist on temperance reform believing prohibition could not work.
Charles was appointed a whip in 1911.
Charles's last speech was on the Parliament Bill in 1911 believing it gave the Speaker too much discretion over what constituted a money bill.
Charles stood down on inheriting his father's title in 1911 but enjoyed the title for less than a year before dying in 1912 aged 44.
Sunday, 5 March 2017
1490 John Slack
Constituency : St Albans 1904-06
John took St Alban's when the Tory MP had to re-stand for taking a government contract. He was supported by the Free Trade Union and the evangelical Church Association. The campaign was rough with a violent disturbance when Lloyd George visited the constituency.
John was educated at the University of London and became a solicitor. He was one of the first members of Derbyshire County Couuncil . He was a Methodist lay preacher and temperance campaigner.
John's maiden speech was a denunciation of the 1902 Education Act.
John was a supporter of female suffrage and introduced a bill for it in 1905 which was talked out.
John was defeated by 552 votes in 1906. He was knighted immediately afterwards.
He died in 1909 aged 51.
Saturday, 4 March 2017
1489 Joseph Dobbie
Constituency : Ayr Burghs 1904-06
Joseph took Ayr Burghs from the Tories by 44 votes.
Joseph was educated at Ayr Academy and Edinburgh University. He was a solicitor.
In 1904 Joseph expressed his support for the short-lived Scottish National League which campaigned for a Scottish Parliament.
Many of Joseph's parliamentary interventions were on Scottish education.
Joseph was defeated by 261 votes in 1906.
In 1908 Joseph was appointed to a Departmental Committee on Housing.
Joseph chaired the Royal Scots Recruiting Committee from 1914 to 1916.
In 1918 Joseph tried to hold Edinburgh Central for the Liberals as a Lloyd George supporter after the retirement of Charles Price but was defeated by Labour's William Graham by 364 votes.
Joseph was knighted in 1920. He sat on the Edinburgh Military Tribunal.He founded the Scottish Vernacular Association.
He died in 1943 aged 80.
Friday, 3 March 2017
1488 John Johnson
Constituency : Gateshead 1904-1909, 1909-10 ( Labour )
John took over from the deceased William Allan at Gateshead. Although John was a member of the I.L.P. he was adopted by the Liberals as a Lib-Lab candidate.
John worked in the mining industry. He was Treasurer of the Durham Miners Association from 1890 to 1896.
John's maiden speech in 1904 was in support of the Trade Unions and Trade Disputes Bill.
In 1906 John scored a huge majority over the Liberal Unionist candidate.
In 1909 the Miners Federation of Great Britain affiliated to the Labour party and required all their sponsored MPs to change their colours to Labour. John obeyed the instruction.
John was the only one of those MPs to face Liberal opposition at the January 1910 election. The Liberal candidate, Harold Elverston opposed the Miners Eight Hours Act which was unpopular with many miners in Gateshead while John Supported it. He came third as Elverston won the contest.
He died later that year aged 60.
Thursday, 2 March 2017
1487 Louis Tillett
Constituency : Norwich 1904-10
Louis recaptured one of the Norwich seats for the Liberals. He secured a 1,820 majority despite the intervention of an ILP candidate.
Louis was the grandson of Jacob Tillett, a previous MP for the constituency. He became a solicitor.
Louis was an infrequent questioner in the House, many of his enquiries concerning the Volunteers.
In 1906 Louis ran in tandem with a Labour candidate and both were elected, Louis coming second in the poll.
Louis stood down in January 1910.
In 1912 Louis rescued a pregnant lady from floods in Norwich.
He died in 1929 aged 64.
Wednesday, 1 March 2017
1486 Harry Eve
Constituency : Ashburton 1904-07
Harry took over from Charles Seale-Hayne at Ashburton.
Harry was the son of a merchant operating in Jamaica, He was educated privately and at Oxford. Harry became a barrister.
Harry never spoke in the Commons.
Harry resigned his seat in order to become a County Court judge in 1907. He was also knighted that year. He served until 1937. He was also a serious farmer who bred cattle in Devon.
He died in 1940 aged 84. His son was killed in action in 1917.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)