Tuesday, 22 May 2018
1919 John Murray
Constituency : Leeds West 1918-22
John took over at Leeds West after Edmund Harvey stood down. He eceived the coupon and defeated Labour and a couple of independents.
John was a fish curer's son from Aberdeenshire. He was educated at Robert Gordon's College and Oxford. From 1910 to 1915 , he was Censor at Christ Church, Oxford. In 1915 he joined the Ministry of Munitions and worked on labour relations.
From 1920 to 1921. John chaired a committee looking at pricing. He also worked for the Board of Education making university awards to former servicemen.
By 1922, John had moved over to the Asquithian camp and narrowly held his seat in a straight fight with Labour. The intervention of a unionist in 1923 pushed him into third place. In 1924, he switched to Kirkcaldy Burghs but failed to unseat the Labour incumbent in a straight fight. In 1925, he stood in the Ripon by-election. Despite distancing himself from Lloyd George's plans for nationalising land and coal, he trailed by over 5.000 votes behind the Tory in a straight fight.
John was a champion of family allowances and declared that the "true place for Liberalism is on the left". However in the 1940s he became associated with the free market Society for Individual Freedom.
After the by-election defeat, John left parliamentary politics and became Principal of the University College of the South West from 1926 to 1951. He was a governor at a number of schools and served on a Colonial Office committee looking at East African education in 1936-7. His opposition to secular education led to him writing a minority report.
He died in 1964 aged 85.
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