Sunday, 7 January 2018
1787 Edmund Harvey
Constituency : Leeds West 1910-18, Dewsbury 1923-4, Combined English Universities 1937-45 ( as Independent Progressive )
Edmund took over from Herbert Gladstone at Leeds West.
Edmund was the son of a teacher and art collector in the city. He was educated at Bootham School and Oxford. He also studied in Berlin and Paris. He worked as an assistant at the British Museum from 1900 to 1904.He became involved with the settlement movement and was Deputy Warden then Warden at Toynbee Hall from 1904 to 1911. He was a Progressive councillor in London from 1904 to 1907 then served on Stepney Borough Council from 1909 to 1911. He was a Quaker.
Edmund was a member of the standing committee on Boy Labour in the Post Office. He acted as PPS to Ellis Ellis-Griffith at the Home Office then to Masterman as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. He resigned the post on the outbreak of World War One.
Edmund found it very difficult to support the government and maintain his religious principles. He worked for the War Victims' Relief Committee in France. He and Arnold Rowntree helped draft the section of the Military Service Act 1916 that allowed the government to direct conscientious objectors to work of national importance. They were accused of arrogating to themselves the right to speak for all Quakers. Edmund then sat on the Pelham Committee which directed what work the objectors should do.
Edmund wisely decided not to stand in 1918. He stood for Dewsbury in 1922 and came second as Labour took the seat. He won in 1923 when the Tories didn't put up a candidate but came third in 1924 when Labour reclaimed the seat. In 1929 he stood for Leeds North but came third once more.
Edmund presented a petition against capital punishment in 1924.
Edmund represented Yorkshire on the National Liberal Federation.
In 1937 Edmund stood for the Combined English Universities seat in a by-election. He stood as an Independent Progressive saying university contests should be about ideas not party politics. The Conservatives put a candidate up against him and there was an Independent Liberal in the field. Archibald Sinclair sent him a telegram of congratulations on his victory.
Edmund was chairman of the National Loan Collection Trust. He wrote many religious tracts for the Quakers.
Edmund stood down in 1945.
He died in 1955 aged 80.
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